Max Weber's Theory Of Power And Conflict

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Homicide as a social phenomena can be studied from a Max Weber ideology, understood through a combination of power and conflict theory. Power and conflict both play into the heart of crime, specifically homicide, and interact fluidly in modern society. As structures, power and conflict often go unseen but contribute the majority of social phenomena. Through homicide, power and conflict can be seen as major structures that deploy class, race, and gender inequalities. Power and conflict, important structures in society, clarify difficult concepts in society; although this can be considered an obvious assertion, many different sociological theories attempt to comprehend the centrality of power and conflict and apply it to everyday life. Max Weber …show more content…

The latent functions surrounding power and conflict may cater to this idea because, as Coser explains, Weber believed a status group could only exist only “to the extent that others accord its members prestige or degrading, which removes them from the rest of social actors and establishes the necessary social distance between ‘them’ and ‘us’” (229). In other words, a person who is never engaged in conflicts may describe themselves as a peaceful or untroubled: they define themselves by the lack of conflict in their life. Weber’s take on modern society focuses on individual action rather than group action, in opposition to Marx. In the greater themes of conflict and power, Marx narrowed his theories on the social conflict, or the class struggle central to society; however, Weber took a different approach, focusing on other forms of struggle, “for example on religious or ethnic ones”, as Michel Wieviorka justifies in Social Conflict. He continues by asserting that while “Marx is interested in the ownership of the means of production and the exploitation of the working class… Weber tends to be interested in the bureaucracy and the rationalization of society” (698). The rationalization of society eradicates traditional motivations and conducts human …show more content…

The story of Cain and Abel is one of the earliest accounts of homicide, and the Roman Republic viewed homicide as a family matter, not one that needed government intervention. Throughout history, homicide has shifted as power and conflict have held different connotations. M. Smith and M. Zahn in Homicide: A Sourcebook of Social Research describe homicides as “extreme manifestations of interpersonal conflict and, for that reason, are detected and recorded in a more reliable, less biased way than more frequent but less extreme types of conflict behavior such as assaults and slanders” (61). Because of this, homicide, as Daly describes in Crime and Conflict: Homicide in Evolutionary Psychological Perspective, “the best prototype of crime” (54). Daly expands on this idea, adding that murder can be claimed a competition or conflict being resolved in a gruesome way. Competition, in this explanation, “refers to any conflict of interests in which one party 's possession or use of a mutually desired resource precludes another party 's possession or use of the same. This category clearly encompasses most of the criminal acts that are likely to be called ‘instrumental’ or ‘rational’, but it also includes crimes that might be deemed

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