Busy. Please wait.
Log in with Clever
or

show password
Forgot Password?

Don't have an account?  Sign up 
Sign up using Clever
or

Username is available taken
show password


Make sure to remember your password. If you forget it there is no way for StudyStack to send you a reset link. You would need to create a new account.
Your email address is only used to allow you to reset your password. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.


Already a StudyStack user? Log In

Reset Password
Enter the associated with your account, and we'll email you a link to reset your password.

Intro to Sociology for CLEP test

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
        Help!  

Question
Answer
Anomie   a feeling of aimlessness or despair.  
🗑
Bureaucracy   a large organization that is divided into jobs based on specific functions and staffed by officials ranked according to a hierarchy  
🗑
Capitalism   a sys of prod that contrasts radically w/ prev econ sys in history, in which those who own capital, or factories, form a ruling class and the mass of the popu. make up a class of wage workers, or a wking class, who don't own the means of their livelihood  
🗑
Division of labor   the growth of complex distinctions between different occupations.  
🗑
Feminist theory   a theory that uses the concepts of gender, class, and race to study and challenge power and inequality.  
🗑
Functionalism   a sociological approach that considers society as a whole, emphasizing the contribution a social activity makes to society.  
🗑
Globalization   the increasing interconnection of the local and the global.  
🗑
Ideology   shared ideas that serve to justify the interests of dominant groups; the concept of ideology connects closely with power, since ideological systems serve to legitimize power that groups hold.  
🗑
Latent functions   the unintentional consequences of a social act.  
🗑
Macrosociology   the analysis of large-scale social systems.  
🗑
Manifest functions   functions intended by the participants in a social activity.  
🗑
Marxism   a theory that focuses on power, ideology, class division, and social conflict. Those in power may depend mainly on the influence of ideology to retain their dominance.  
🗑
Materialist conception of history   a view of history, espoused by Marx, in which economic influences are the main cause of social change.  
🗑
Microsociology   the study of everyday behavior in situations involving face-to-face interaction.  
🗑
Organic solidarity   According to Emile Durkheim, the social cohesion that results from the various parts of a society functioning as an integrated whole.  
🗑
Postmodernist theory   the belief that society is no longer governed by history or progress. Postmodern society is highly pluralistic and diverse, with no "grand narrative" guiding its development.  
🗑
Power   the capability of individuals or groups to make their own concerns or interests count, even when others resist. Power sometimes involves the direct use of force but is almost always accompanied by the development of ideas (ideologies)  
🗑
Rational choice theory   the view that a person's behavior can be best explained by his or her self-interest.  
🗑
Rationalization   the organization of social, economic, and cultural life according to principles of efficiency, on the basis of technical knowledge  
🗑
Science   a discipline that uses systematic methods of empirical investigation, the analysis of data, theoretical thinking, and logical assessment of arguments to develop a body of knowledge about a particular subject matter  
🗑
Social Constraint   The conditioning influence on our behavior of the groups and societies of which we are members  
🗑
Social facts   aspects of social life that shape our actions as individuals, such as the economy and religion  
🗑
Social structure   the patterns in our social behavior. It is not a stagnant, fixed force, and people are not simply passive receptors of social commands  
🗑
Sociological imagination   our ability to break free from our particular circumstances and see our social world in a new light. C. Wright Mills described the sociological imagination as the ability to "think ourselves away" from the familiarity of our behavior in order to see the  
🗑
Sociology   the study of human social life, groups, and societies, focusing on the modern world  
🗑
Structuration   a two-way process by which we shape our social world through our individual actions and by which we are shaped by society  
🗑
Symbol   something that stands for something else  
🗑
Symbolic interactionism   the view that stresses the exchange of symbols between individuals in social interaction. It emphasizes the small-scale interactions of an individual, not society as a whole  
🗑
Theory   an abstract interpretation that can be used to explain a wide variety of empirical situations  
🗑
Theoretical approach   a perspective on social life derived from a particular theoretical tradition. Some major theoretical traditions of sociology include functionalism, symbolic interactionism, and Marxism  
🗑
Black feminism   feminism that focuses on the problems facing black women. This theory argues that ethnic divisions among women are not considered by the main feminist schools of thought.  
🗑
Comparable worth   a policy that attempts to remedy the gender pay gap by adjusting pay so that those in female-dominated jobs are not paid less than men for equivalent work.  
🗑
Feminist theory   a sociological perspective that emphasizes the centrality of gender in analyzing the social world and particularly the uniqueness of the experience of women  
🗑
Gender   the psychological, social, and cultural differences between males and females.  
🗑
Gender inequality   the inequality between men and women in terms of wealth, income, and status.  
🗑
Gender socialization   the learning of gender roles with the help of social agencies such as families and the media.  
🗑
Gender typing   typing that results when women hold occupations of low status and pay and men hold occupations of high status and pay.  
🗑
Glass ceiling   a policy that prevents individuals (such as women or members of a minority) from achieving upward mobility within an organization.  
🗑
Glass escalator   the situation in which men in traditionally female jobs such as teaching find themselves riding to the top of the organizational ladder as a result of their gender.  
🗑
Human capital theory   a theory that argues that individuals invest in their own "human capital" in order to increase their productivity and earnings.  
🗑
Liberal feminism   feminism that seeks to change society by ensuring rights through legislation and policy.  
🗑
Patriarchy   the dominance of men in a society.  
🗑
Radical feminism   feminism that views men as dominating women in every area of society, including the interpersonal.  
🗑
Rape   the forcing of nonconsensual vaginal, oral, or anal intercourse  
🗑
Sex   the biological or anatomical differences between males and females.  
🗑
Sexual harassment   unwanted sexual advances, remarks, or behavior that are offensive to the recipient and interfere with job performance.  
🗑
Social construction of gender   the learning of gender roles through socialization and interaction with others  
🗑
Antiracism   forms of thought and/or practice that seek to confront, eradicate and/or ameliorate racism  
🗑
Apartheid   the system of racial segregation established in South Africa  
🗑
Assimilation   New immigrant groups take over the attitudes and languages of the dominant community.  
🗑
Diaspora   refers to the dispersal of an ethnic population from an original homeland into foreign areas, often in a forced manner or under traumatic circumstances.  
🗑
Discrimination   is the actual behavior that is directed toward another group in a negative manner. Although prejudice and discrimination often coexist, it is possible for them to exist separately. People may engage in discriminatory behavior without having any negative  
🗑
Displacement   the transferring of ideas or emotions from their true source to another object  
🗑
Emigration   the movement of people out of one country in order to settle in another  
🗑
Ethnic cleansing   the creation of ethnically homogeneous territories through the mass expulsion of other ethnic populations  
🗑
Ethnicity   refers to cultural practices and outlooks of a given community that have emerged historically and tend to set people apart. The main distinguishing factors are language, history or ancestry, religion and styles of dress. Ethnic differences are wholly lea  
🗑
Genocide   The systematic, planned destruction of a racial, political, or cultural group.  
🗑
Immigration   the movement of people into one country from another for the purpose of settlement  
🗑
Institutional racism   Racism exists when larger structures conform to racist ideals, even though these institutions are not necessarily made up of racist people. This form of racism can be found in large structures like schools and businesses, as well as the government.  
🗑
Melting pot   When different cultures and outlooks of the ethnic groups in a society are merged together.  
🗑
Minority groups   are disadvantaged ethnic groups compared to the dominant group (a group possessing more wealth, power, and prestige).  
🗑
Multiculturalism   Ethnic groups exist separately and share equally in economic and political life.  
🗑
Pluralism   Ethnic groups exist separately, but participate in the larger society's economic and political life.  
🗑
Prejudice   refers to attitudes of one group toward another, while discrimination refers to actual behavior toward the other group.  
🗑
Race   refers to physical characteristics that are treated by members of a community or society as socially significant.  
🗑
Racial literacy   the skills taught to children of multiracial families to help them cope with racial hierarchies and to integrate multiple ethnic identities  
🗑
Racialization   the process by which understandings of race are used to classify individuals or groups of people  
🗑
Racism   is prejudice based on socially significant physical distinction.  
🗑
Scapegoat   an individual or group blamed for wrongs that were not of their doing  
🗑
Segregation   The practice of keeping racial and ethnic groups physically separate, thereby maintaining the superior position of the dominant group.  
🗑
Situational Ethnicity   When people emphasize or downplay their ethnicity based on the context or situation. An example of this is when a person will indicate their ethnicity on a job application, but will downplay their ethnic identity in other situations that are discriminato  
🗑
Stereotype   a fixed and inflexible category  
🗑
Symbolic ethnicity   occurs after one has been assimilated into the larger culture and a person retains their ethnic identity only for symbolic purposes. An example of this is St. Patrick's Day, when many people celebrate an ethnicity that does not play a part in their daily  
🗑
AARP   the American Association of Retired Persons, a nonprofit organization with 33 million members more than 50 years of age.  
🗑
Activity theory   argues that an active individual is more likely to remain healthy and to have a friendship network.  
🗑
Ageism   prejudice and/or discrimination based on age, partly fueled by stereotypes.  
🗑
Aging   the combination of biological, psychological, and social processes that affect people as they grow older.  
🗑
Alzheimer's disease   the progressive deterioration of brain cells.  
🗑
Andragogy   adult learning.  
🗑
Conflict theory of aging   a theory that focuses on how society produces various forms of inequality among the elderly.  
🗑
Disengagement theory   the theory that holds that the withdrawal of the elderly from their former roles and their preoccupation with their inner life and the prospect of dying are normal and healthy and should be encouraged.  
🗑
Generational equity   the fairness of governmental distributions to particular age groups.  
🗑
Geragogys   older-adult learning.  
🗑
Graying   a term used to indicate that an increasing proportion of a society's population is becoming elderly  
🗑
Medicare   a governmental insurance program instituted in 1965 that pays for acute medical costs for the elderly.  
🗑
Oldest-old   the segment of the population 85 years of age and older.  
🗑
Old-old   the segment of the population 75 to 84 years of age.  
🗑
Social age   the norms, values, and roles that are culturally associated with a particular chronological age.  
🗑
Social gerontology   a discipline concerning the social aspects of aging.  
🗑
Social Security   Instituted in 1935, a program that provides retirement pay for all elderly people who have worked a certain number of years and have contributed a portion of their paycheck into a government fund.  
🗑
Young-old   the segment of the population 65 to 74 years of age.  
🗑
Authority   a government's legitimate use of power.  
🗑
Citizen   a member of a political community, having both rights and duties associated with that membership  
🗑
Civil rights   the rights of the individual under the law.  
🗑
Civil Society   the realm of activity that lies between the state and the market, including the family, schools, community associations, and noneconomic institutions  
🗑
Collective Action   Action undertaken in a relatively spontaneous way by a large number of people assembled together.  
🗑
Communism   A set of political ideas associated with Marx, as developed particularly by Lenin and institutionalized in the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and some Third World countries.  
🗑
Constitutional monarchy   a system of government with a royal family whose powers are severely restricted by a constitution, which puts authority in the hands of democratically elected representatives.  
🗑
Democracy   literally, rule by the people.  
🗑
Democratic elitism   the view that direct democracy is impossible because running a government requires decision-making by individual experts, not the mass of citizens.  
🗑
Direct democracy   a form of participatory democracy that allows citizens to vote directly on laws and policies  
🗑
Ethnie   a term used to describe a group that shares ideas of common ancestry, a common cultural identity, and a link with a specific homeland  
🗑
Field of action   Touraine examined the historical context of social movements and the field of action, the arena within which social movements interact with established organizations. Touraine argued that this process of interaction was central in shaping social movement  
🗑
Government   a political apparatus in which officials enact policies and make decisions.  
🗑
Historicity   the use of an understanding of history as a basis for trying to change history--that is, producing informed processes of social change  
🗑
Interest group   any organization that attempts to influence elected officials to consider their aims when deciding on legislation.  
🗑
Legitimation crisis   the failure of a political order to generate a sufficient level of commitment and involvement on the part of its citizens to be able to govern properly  
🗑
Liberal democracy   a system in which citizens have a choice to vote between at least two political parties for representatives who will be entrusted with decision-making.  
🗑
Local nationalism   the belief that communities that share a cultural identity should have political autonomy, even within smaller units of a nation-state.  
🗑
Multiple sovereignty   a situation in which there is no single sovereign power in a society  
🗑
Nationalism   a set of symbols and beliefs that provide the sense of being part of a single political community.  
🗑
Nation-state   a government apparatus that is recognized as having sovereign rights within the borders of a territorial area, able to back its claims to sovereignty by military power, and many of whose citizens feel committed to its national identity.  
🗑
Nations without states   Instances in which the members of a nation lack political sovereignty over the area they claim as their own.  
🗑
New social movements   a set of social movements that have arisen in Western societies since the 1960s in response to the changing risks facing human societies.  
🗑
Participatory democracy   democracy in which everyone is immediately involved in all decision-making, although this can be cumbersome for larger groups.  
🗑
Pluralist theorists of modern democracy   theorists who believe that the competition between interest groups ensures that political power is not concentrated in the hands of one group or class.  
🗑
Political rights   the right to take part in politics.  
🗑
Politics   The means by which power is employed to influence the nature and content of governmental activities.  
🗑
Power   the ability of individuals or groups to enforce their will, even when others resist.  
🗑
Power elite   Small networks of individuals who, according to C. Wright Mills, hold concentrated power in modern societies.  
🗑
Relative deprivation   the discrepancy between the lives people are forced to lead and what they think could realistically be achieved.  
🗑
Revolutions   a type of collective action that occurs in situations of multiple sovereignty, when a government lacks full control over its territory.  
🗑
Social movement   an organized collective attempt to further common interests through collaborative action outside the sphere of established institutions.  
🗑
Social rights   the right of every individual to enjoy a minimum standard of living.  
🗑
Sovereignty   governmental authority over a given area.  
🗑
State   a political apparatus (government institutions) ruling a given territory.  
🗑
State overload   A theory that holds that modern states face major difficulties as a result of being overburdened with complex administrative decisions.  
🗑
Structural strains   Smelser maintained that social movements develop in response to situations of structural strain.  
🗑
Welfare state   A political system that provides a wide range of welfare benefits for its citizens.  
🗑
Alienation   industrial production within capitalist settings where workers have little or no control over their work.  
🗑
Automation   the use of robots in the production process.  
🗑
Capitalism   a way of organizing economic life based on private ownership of the means of production; profit as an incentive; free competition for markets to sell goods, acquire cheap raw materials, and use cheap labor; restless expansion; and investment to accumulat  
🗑
Corporation   business firms or companies  
🗑
Division of labor   separation of work into an enormous number of different occupations in which people specialize.  
🗑
Economic interdependence   the fact that in the division of labor, individuals depend on others to produce many or most of the goods they need to sustain their lives  
🗑
Economy   the collection of institutions that provide the overall production and distribution of goods and services in a society.  
🗑
Entrepreneur   the owner/founder of a business firm  
🗑
Ethnocentric transnationals   companies in which management practices are standardized across all countries and are based on the cultural norms of the country where the company is based.  
🗑
Family capitalism   large firms run either by individual entrepreneurs or by members of the same family and then passed on to their descendants.  
🗑
Flexible production   process in which computers design customized products for a mass market  
🗑
Fordism   application of the principles of scientific management to mass production tied to the cultivation of mass markets.  
🗑
Geocentric transnationals   transnationals in which management is highly adaptive and mobile according to need.  
🗑
Group production   collaborative work groups such as the "quality circle," in which workers actively participate in the design and implementation of production methods.  
🗑
High-trust system   organizations or work settings in which individuals are permitted a great deal of autonomy and control over the work task  
🗑
Informal economy   transactions outside the sphere of regular employment, including the exchange of cash for services provided and the direct exchange of goods and services.  
🗑
Institutional capitalism   a form of capitalism characterized by a consolidated network of business leaders.  
🗑
International division of labor   the interdependence of countries or regions that trade in global markets  
🗑
Knowledge economy   an economy in which ideas, information, and forms of knowledge underpin innovation and economic growth.  
🗑
Low-trust system   an organizational or work setting in which people are allowed little responsibility for; or control over, the work task  
🗑
Managerial capitalism   a form of capitalism in which managers, not entrepreneurs or owners, make most of the corporate decisions.  
🗑
Monopoly   an exclusively commanding position in an industry.  
🗑
Occupation   work done in exchange for a regular wage.  
🗑
Oligopoly   a small group of large corporations that predominate in an industry.  
🗑
Polycentric transnationals   corporations in which management practices are based on broad guidelines adapted by local managers in each country.  
🗑
Post-Fordism   a new type of capitalist production in which flexibility and innovation are used to meet market demands for customized products.  
🗑
Portfolio worker   a worker who has a "portfolio" of different skills and can move readily from job to job.  
🗑
Quality circle   types of industrialized group production, where workers use their expertise to participate actively in decision making  
🗑
Strike   a temporary stoppage of work by a group of employees in order to express a grievance or enforce a demand.  
🗑
Taylorism   division of work into simple tasks that can be timed and organized.  
🗑
Technology   the application of knowledge of the material world to production; the creation of material instruments (such as machines) used in human interaction with nature  
🗑
Transnational/multinational companies   companies that operate across national boundaries in two or more countries and are of key importance to the international division of labor - the worldwide distribution of jobs.  
🗑
Union density   the number of union members as a percentage of the number of people who could be union members.  
🗑
Welfare capitalism   a practice that sought to make the corporation--rather than the state or trade union--the primary shelter from the vicissitudes of the market in modern industrial life.  
🗑
Work   the performance of tasks to produce goods and perform services that cater to human needs.  
🗑
Affective individualism   marriage partners are usually selected on the basis of romantic love.  
🗑
Cohabitation   living together in a sexual relationship outside of marriage.  
🗑
Extended family   a group made up of close-kin relatives, other than the nuclear family, living together in the same household.  
🗑
Family   a group of persons directly linked by kin connections, the adult members of which assume responsibility for the care of the children.  
🗑
Family of orientation   the family into which one is born.  
🗑
Family of procreation   the family one enters into as an adult.  
🗑
Kinship   family ties established through marriage or through lines of descent.  
🗑
Marriage   a socially acknowledged and approved sexual union between two adults.  
🗑
Matrilocal family   referring to a married couple living near or with the bride's parents.  
🗑
Monogamy   marriage to only one individual at a time.  
🗑
Nuclear family   a household in which a married couple or single parent live with their own or adopted children.  
🗑
Patrilocal family   referring to a couple living near or with the groom's parents.  
🗑
Personality stabilization   the role that the family plays in assisting adult family members emotionally.  
🗑
Polyandry   marriage in which a woman may be married to more than one man at a time.  
🗑
Polygamy   marriage to more than one spouse.  
🗑
Polygyny   marriage in which a man may be married to more than one woman at a time.  
🗑
Primary socialization   the process by which children learn the cultural norms of the society in which they are born.  
🗑
Stepfamily   a family in which at least one of the adults is a stepparent.  
🗑
Communication   the transfer of information from one person, context, or group to another.  
🗑
Cultural capital   the cultural advantages that coming from a good home confer on children.  
🗑
Cyberspace   the space of interaction formed by the global network of computers that compose the Internet.  
🗑
Global village   a community in which people throughout the world see major news items unfold and hence participate in the event together.  
🗑
Hidden curriculum   the teaching of values, attitudes, and habits (what is learned in school but has nothing to do with the formal content of the lessons).  
🗑
Hyperreality   An idea assoc. with Jean Baudrillard, who argued that as a result of the spread of e-commu., there is not longer a separate "reality" to which TV progs and other cult prods refer. Inst., what we take to be "reality" is structured by such commu. itself.  
🗑
Information poverty   a condition in which students who attend schools without the funds to purchase technological equipment are less able to compete with those with such equipment.  
🗑
Intelligence   level of intellectual ability, particularly as measured by IQ tests.  
🗑
IQ (intelligence quotient)   a score attained on tests of symbolic or reasoning abilities  
🗑
Local knowledge   In traditional cultures most knowledge is passed on through the local community and cultural diffusion is slow and inconsistent.  
🗑
Mass media   the collective means of communicating to large numbers of people, such as movies, television, radio, videos, compact discs, magazines, and newspapers.  
🗑
Mediated interaction   dialogical interaction involving the use of a media technology, which stretches out the interaction over time and space.  
🗑
Mediated quasi-interaction   the type of interaction created by the mass media; it is monological, or one-way, communication, from broadcaster to viewer.  
🗑
Public sphere   a sphere of public opinion and public debate.  
🗑
Tracking   dividing students into groups that receive different instruction on the basis of assumed similarities in ability or attainment.  
🗑
World information order   an inter. sys. of prod, distr., and consumption of informational goods. (Given the paramount position of the industrial countries in the world information order, many believe that the Third World countries are subject to a new form of imperialism.)  
🗑
Alienation   The sense that our own abilities as human beings are taken over by other entities.  
🗑
Charisma   the inspirational quality capable of capturing the imagination and devotion of a mass of followers.  
🗑
Church   a large, established religious body, having a bureaucratic structure.  
🗑
Civil religion   a set of religious beliefs through which a society interprets its own history in light of some conception of ultimate reality.  
🗑
Cult   a loosely knit group of people who follow the same leader or pursue similar religious ideals.  
🗑
Denomination   a sect that has become institutionalized, having a permanent form.  
🗑
Disestablishment   a period during which the political influence of established religions is successfully challenged.  
🗑
Evangelicalism   a belief in spiritual rebirth. It typ. inv the adm of personal sin and salvation through accept of Christ, a literal interp. of the Bible, an emphasis on highly emotional and personal spiritual piety, and a commitment to spreading "the Word" to others.  
🗑
Fundamentalism   a religious view that is antimodern in many of its beliefs, calling for strict codes of morality and conduct.  
🗑
Liberation theology   An activist Catholic religious movement that combines Catholic beliefs with a passion for social justice for the poor  
🗑
Monotheism   belief in a single god  
🗑
cMonotheistic religions   religions in which there is only one God  
🗑
New religious movements   the broad range of religious and spiritual groups, cults, and sects that have emerged in Western countries.  
🗑
Polytheism   belief in several or many gods.  
🗑
Profane   the ordinary objects of everyday life, such as chairs, tables, and sinks.  
🗑
Religion   a cultural system of commonly shared beliefs and rituals that provides a sense of ultimate meaning and purpose by creating an idea of reality that is sacred, all-encompassing, and supernatural.  
🗑
Religious economy   a view that holds that religion can be understood as organizations in competition with one another for followers.  
🗑
Religious movement   An association of people who join together to seek to spread a new religion or to promote a new interpretation of an existing religion  
🗑
Religious nationalism   the linking of strongly held religious convictions with beliefs about a people's social and political destiny.  
🗑
Sacred   objects such as crosses, bibles, and jewelry that have a direct spiritual connection to the divine  
🗑
Sects   small groups of believers with the of aim of restoring the original purity of doctrines that have become "corrupted" in the hands of official churches.  
🗑
Secular thinking   Worldly thinking, particularly as seen in the rise of science, technology, and rational thought in general  
🗑
Secularization   the process by which society becomes more concerned with worldly matters than with spiritual matters and religious organizations lose their influence over social life.  
🗑
Theism   a belief in one or more supernatural deities  
🗑
Total institutions   organizations in which members are expected to subsume their individual identities in world-rejecting movements, to adhere to strict ethical codes or rules, and to withdraw from activity in the outside world.  
🗑
World-accommodating movement   religious movements that emphasize the importance of inner religious life and spiritual purity over worldly concerns  
🗑
World-affirming movement   religious movements that seek to enhance followers' ability to succeed in the outside world by helping them to unlock their human potential  
🗑
World-rejecting movement   religious movements that are exclusive in nature, highly critical of the outside world, and demanding of their members  
🗑
Biomedical model of health   The set of principles underpinning Western medical systems and practices. Diseases are defined objectively, in accordance with the presence of recognized symptoms, and the healthy body is treated with scientifically based medical remedies.  
🗑
Epidemiology   The study of the distribution and incidence of disease and illness within a population.  
🗑
Homophobia   an aversion or hatred of homosexuals and their lifestyles, along with behavior based on such aversion.  
🗑
Procreative technology   new technology that enables women and men to control their reproductive behavior.  
🗑
Sick role   A term associated with the functionalist Talcott Parsons to describe the patterns of behavior that a sick person adopts in order to minimize the disruptive impact of his or her illness on others.  
🗑
Social technology   the means by which we try to alter our bodies.  
🗑
Socialization of nature   phenomena that used to be "natural," or given in nature (such as reproduction), have now become social--they depend upon our own control of social decisions.  
🗑
Sociology of the body   sociology that focuses on how our bodies are affected by social influences.  
🗑
Stigma   any characteristic that sets an individual or group apart from the majority of the population, with the result that the individual or group is treated with suspicion or hostility.  
🗑
Collective consumption   consumption of goods and services offered by corporations and governments.  
🗑
Conurbation   an agglomeration of towns or cities into an unbroken urban environment  
🗑
Created environment   the distribution of people in cities resulting from the spread of industrial capitalism.  
🗑
Crude birth rate   the number of live births per year per thousand of the population.  
🗑
Crude death rate   the number of deaths per thousand of population per year.  
🗑
Demographic transition   economic development generated by industrialization leading to population stability.  
🗑
Demography   The study of population.  
🗑
Doubling time   the time it takes for a particular level of population to double  
🗑
Ecological approach   a perspective on urban analysis emphasizing the "natural" distribution of city neighborhoods into areas having contrasting characteristics.  
🗑
Environmental ecology   the study of how we can best cope with and contain environmental damage and the very ways of life within industrial societies.  
🗑
Exponential growth   a geometric, rather than linear, rate of progression, producing a fast rise in the numbers of a population  
🗑
Fecundity   the potential number of children women are biologically able to bear.  
🗑
Fertility   the number of live-born children the average woman has.  
🗑
Gentrification   a process of urban renewal in which older, deteriorated housing is refurbished by affluent people moving into the area  
🗑
Global city   urban centers that are home to the headquarters of large, transnational corporations and a superabundance of financial, technological, and consulting services.  
🗑
Infant mortality rate   the number of babies per thousand births in any year who die before reaching their first birthday.  
🗑
Inner city   the areas composing the central neighborhoods of a city, as distinct from the suburbs  
🗑
Life expectancy   the number of years an average person can expect to live.  
🗑
Life span   the maximum number of years that an individual can live.  
🗑
Malthusianism   the belief that population growth tends to outstrip food production, leading to natural curbs on population, such as famine and war.  
🗑
Megacity   A term used by Manuel Castells to describe large, intensely concentrated urban spaces that serve as connection points for the global economy.  
🗑
Megalopolis   means the "city of all cities" in ancient Greek--use in modern times to refer to very large conurbations.  
🗑
Mortality   the number of deaths in a population.  
🗑
Suburbanization   the massive development and inhabiting of towns surrounding cities.  
🗑
Sustainable development   the use of renewable resources to promote economic growth, the protection of animal species and biodiversity, and the commitment to maintaining clean air, water, and land.  
🗑
Urban ecology   the study of urban settlements and the distribution of population in different types of neighborhoods. Such study can be understood through the processes of adaptation, invasion, competition, and succession.  
🗑
Urban renewal   The process of renovating deteriorating neighborhoods by encouraging the renewal of old buildings and the construction of new ones.  
🗑
Urbanism   a form of social existence characterized by fleeting, impersonal interactions; a rapid pace of life; and development of a homogeneous and anonymous mass.  
🗑
Urbanization   the movement of population from the countryside into towns and cities.  
🗑
Causal relationship   a relationship in which one event or situation brings about the other.  
🗑
Causation   the causal influence of one factor, or variable, upon another. A cause and effect relationship exists whenever a particular event is produced by the existence of another.  
🗑
Comparative questions   questions that relate one social context within a society to another society or contrasting examples from different societies  
🗑
Comparative research   comparison of research results among different countries or societies; this allows sociologists to clarify what is happening in an area of research.  
🗑
Control variable   a variable that is held constant to discover whether a correlation between variables involves a causal relationship  
🗑
Correlation   the existence of a regular relationship between two variables.  
🗑
Dependent variable   a variable that is affected by the independent variable  
🗑
Developmental questions   questions that relate to the knowledge produced when sociologists link a current phenomenon to historical forces  
🗑
Empirical investigation   factual inquiry carried out in any area of sociological study  
🗑
Ethnography   a way of studying people firsthand using participant observation  
🗑
Experiment   the testing of a hypothesis in a highly controlled environment  
🗑
Factual questions   questions that seek to determine the what and the how of a subject. They are also often called empirical questions  
🗑
Hypothesis   an idea or a guess about a given state of affairs, put forward as a basis for empirical testing  
🗑
Independent variable   a variable that produces an effect on another  
🗑
Life histories   biographical material assembled about particular individuals--usually as recalled by the individuals themselves  
🗑
Oral History   interviews with people about events they witnessed or experienced at some point earlier in their lives  
🗑
Participant observation   observation that involves spending time with subjects and participating in their daily lives  
🗑
Pilot study   a trial run in survey research  
🗑
Population   respondents who answer a survey  
🗑
Random sample   a sample in which every member of the population has the same probability of being included  
🗑
Reflexivity   the connections between knowledge and social life. For example, the knowledge we gain about society can affect the way in which we act in it  
🗑
Representative sample   a sample from a larger population that is statistically typical of that population  
🗑
Research methods   the diverse methods of investigation used to gather empirical (factual) material  
🗑
Sample   a small but representative proportion of the population  
🗑
Sampling   studying a proportion of individuals or cases from a larger population as representative of that population as a whole  
🗑
Sociological questions   distinct questions posed by sociologists and to which they try to find the answers through systematic research  
🗑
Surveys   the gathering of less-detailed information from a larger group of people  
🗑
Theoretical questions   questions that seek to interpret the answers to empirical questions  
🗑
Triangulation   a method in which researchers combine two or more methods, each being used to check or supplement the material obtained from the other(s)  
🗑
Variable   any dimension along which individuals or groups vary  
🗑
External risk   dangers such as drought, earthquakes, famines, and storms that spring from the natural world and are not related to the actions of humans.  
🗑
Information society   a society no longer based primarily on the production of material goods but on the production of knowledge  
🗑
Knowledge society   another common term for information society--a society based on the production and consumption of knowledge and information  
🗑
Manufactured risks   risks that are created by the impact of our own knowledge and technology on the natural world.  
🗑
Postindustrial society   society based on knowledge and information and distinguished by an economy made up mostly of service occupations.  
🗑
Postmodernism   the belief that society is no longer governed by history or progress. Postmodern society is highly pluralistic and diverse, with no "grand narrative" (overall conceptions of history) guiding its development.  
🗑
Service society   a concept related to the one of postindustrial society, it refers to a social order distinguished by the growth of service occupations at the expense of industrial jobs that produce material goods  
🗑
Social change   the transformation of the institutions and culture of society over time.  
🗑
Transnational corporation   business corporations located in two or more countries  
🗑
Culture   the values the members of a given group hold, the languages they speak, the symbols they revere, the norms they follow, and the material goods they create, from tools to clothing  
🗑
Values   abstract ideals  
🗑
Norms   Fixed principles or rules people are expected to observe; they represent the dos and don't of social life  
🗑
material goods   the physical objects that a society creates, which influence the ways in which people live  
🗑
society   a system of interrelationships that connects individuals together  
🗑
cultural turn   often used to describe sociology's recent emphasis on the importance of understanding the role of culture in daily life  
🗑
sociobiology   application of biological principles to explain the social activities of animals, including human beings  
🗑
Instincts   inborn, biologically fixed patterns of action found in all cultures  
🗑
Subcultures   refers to people from different cultural backgrounds, or who speak different languages, within a larger society and any segments of the population that are distinguishable from the rest of society by their cultural patterns  
🗑
Assimilation   the process by which different cultures are absorbed into a single mainstream culture  
🗑
Multiculturalism   calls for respecting cultural diversity and promoting equality of different cultures  
🗑
Ethnocentrism   judging other cultures in terms of the standards of one's own culture  
🗑
cultural relativism   The practice of judging a society by its own standards  
🗑
cultural universals   some common features of human behavior that are found in virtually all societies. Examples are marriage and a grammatically complex language  
🗑
linguistic relativity hypothesis   In the 1930s, the anthropological linguist Edward Sapir and his student Benjamin Lee Whorf advanced this theory, which argues that the language we use influences our perceptions of the world  
🗑
signifier   any vehicle of meaning--any set of elements used to communicate. The sounds made in speech, dress, pictures or visual signs are all examples of signifiers  
🗑
Semiotics   the analysis of nonverbal cultural meanings  
🗑
hunting and gathering societies   small groups or tribes often numbering no more than thirty or forty people  
🗑
Pastoral societies   relied mainly on domesticated livestock  
🗑
agrarian societies   grew crops (practiced agriculture)  
🗑
Industrialization   the emergence of machine production, based on the use of inanimate power resources (such as steam or electricity)  
🗑
industrialized societies   industrial production (whose techniques are also used in the production of food) is the main basis of the economy in industrialized societies  
🗑
Nation-states   political communities with clearly delimited borders dividing them from each other, rather than the vague frontier areas that used to separate traditional states  
🗑
colonialism   Fr the 17th-early 20th cent.the West count. est colonies in many areas prev occup. by trad soci.,using their sup military strgth where necces Alth virt. all colonies have now atta. thier indep., the proc. of was cent. to shap. the social map of the globe  
🗑
developing world   in which most of the world's population live, the developing world is almost all formerly colonized areas. The majority of the population works in agricultural production, some of which is geared to world markets  
🗑
First World   countries were (and are) the industrialized states of Europe, the United States, Canada, Australasia (Australia, New Zealand, and Melanesia), South Africa, and Japan. Nearly all First World societies have multiparty, parliamentary systems of government  
🗑
Second World   societies meant the communist count. of what was then the Soviet Union (USSR) and E. Europe, incl, ie, Czech., Poland, E. Germany, and Hungary. 2nd Wld soci were cent. planned econo., which allowed little role for priv. property or comp. econ. enterprise  
🗑
Third World   Another name for used for developing countries  
🗑
Newly industrializing economy (NIE)   Countries that have recently industrialized. The East Asian NIEs have shown the most sustained levels of economic prosperity  
🗑
Age-grades   formalized peer groups  
🗑
Agencies of socialization   structured groups or contexts within which significant socialization occurs. These include the family, peer groups, schools, mass media, and work environment  
🗑
Cognition   the child's active capacity to make sense of the world  
🗑
Concrete operational stage   the stage when the child learns to master abstractions and logical concepts  
🗑
Egocentric   Piaget's term for the characteristic quality of a child during the early years of her life. Egocentric thinking involves understanding objects and events in terms of the child's own position.  
🗑
Formal operational stage   the final stage of cognitive development. This stage, Acc to Piaget, kids begin to think like adult. They can now make jud. based on abst ideas, not neces. on concrete objs. Formal operational stage depends partly on sch. and is not ach. by every adult.  
🗑
Gender role   social roles assigned to each sex and labeled as masculine or feminine  
🗑
Gender socialization   the learning of gender roles, which begins virtually as soon as an infant is born.  
🗑
Generalized other   the general values and moral rules of the culture.  
🗑
Identity   the concept people hold about who they are and what is meaningful to them.  
🗑
Life course   the various transitions individuals experience during their lives.  
🗑
Mass media   forms of communication designed to reach mass audiences, such as newspapers, magazines, radio, television etc.  
🗑
Peer groups   social groups with similar ages and social backgrounds.  
🗑
Preoperational stage   the stage during which the child learns language and symbolic representation.  
🗑
Self-consciousness   a state achieved by individuals when they see themselves as others view them.  
🗑
Self-identity (personal identity)   the process of self-development through which we formulate a unique sense of ourselves and our relationship to the world around us  
🗑
Sensorimotor stage   learning occurs through direct contacts with the outside world.  
🗑
Social identity   the characteristics that are attributed to an individual by others. Examples of social identities include student, mother, lawyer, etc  
🗑
Social roles   socially defined expectations that a person in a given social position follows.  
🗑
Social self   the identity conferred upon an individual by the reactions of others  
🗑
Socialization   the process whereby, through contact with other human beings, the helpless infant gradually becomes a self-aware, knowledgeable human being, skilled in the ways of the given culture and environment.  
🗑
Achieved status   status based on an individual's efforts  
🗑
Ascribed status   status based on biological factors, such as race, sex, or age  
🗑
Back regions   areas where people assemble the props and prepare themselves for interaction in the more formal setting  
🗑
Civil inattention   the nonintrusive recognition of others  
🗑
Clock time   time as measured by the clock rather than time based on events in the natural world (ex. setting of the sun)  
🗑
Compulsion of proximityn   the tendency to want to meet in person whenever possible  
🗑
Conversational analysis   examination of all facets of a conversation for meaning--from the smallest filler words (such as umm and ah) to the precise timing of interchanges (including pauses, interruptions, and overlaps)  
🗑
Encounter   a meeting between two or more people in a situation of face-to-face interaction  
🗑
Ethnomethodology   the analysis of the ways in which we actively make sense of what others mean by what they say they mean; a term first coined by Howard Garfinkel  
🗑
Focused interaction   interaction that occurs when two or more individuals directly attend to what the other or others are saying and doing  
🗑
Front regions   the social occasions or encounters in which individuals act out formal roles  
🗑
Impression management   the unconscious following of norms, such as dressing appropriately for a business meeting  
🗑
Interactional vandalism   behavior in which a subordinate breaks the tacit basis of everyday interaction of value to a more powerful person. It is closely tied up with overarching class, gender, and racial structures  
🗑
Master status   the status that generally determines a person's overall position in society  
🗑
Nonverbal communication   social interaction that includes facial expression, gestures, and body movements  
🗑
Personal space   a culturally defined boundary around which people interact with others  
🗑
Regionalization   one way sociologists think about how social interaction is zoned in time-space  
🗑
Response cries   exclamations that demonstrate our controlled management of the details of social life  
🗑
Role   socially defined expectations of an individual in a given status or social position  
🗑
Social constructionism   the theory that what individuals and groups perceive as reality is itself a creation of the social interaction of individuals and groups  
🗑
Social interaction   the process by which we act and react to those around us  
🗑
Social position   the social identity an individual has in a given group or society; social positions may be general in nature or more specific  
🗑
Status   the social honor that a particular group is accorded by other members of society  
🗑
Status set   an individual's group of social statuses  
🗑
Time-space   All social interaction is situated in time and space. We can analyze how our daily lives are "zoned" in time and space, combined by looking at how activities occur during definite durations and at the same time involve spatial movement  
🗑
Unfocused interaction   the awareness individuals have of one another in large gatherings when not directly in conversation together  
🗑
Bureaucracy   literally, "the rule of officials." Characteristics include hierarchy of authority, written rules, full-time and salaried officials, separation of work and home life, and no ownership by workers  
🗑
Corporate culture   the rituals, events, or traditions unique to a company. A distinctive corporate culture brings all employees together and strengthens group solidarity  
🗑
Dyads   a group with two members  
🗑
Formal organization   an organization that is rationally designed to achieve its objectives, often by means of explicit rules, regulations, and procedures  
🗑
Groupthink   a process by which the members of a group ignore ways of thinking and plans of action that go against the group consensus  
🗑
Human resource management   a style of management that regards a company's workforce as vital to economic competitiveness  
🗑
Ideal type   "A pure type," constructed by emphasizing certain traits of a social item that do not necessarily exist in reality. Ex. Weber's ideal type of bureaucratic organization  
🗑
Information technology   computers and electronic communication devices  
🗑
In-group   groups for which one feels particular loyalty and respect  
🗑
International governmental organization (IGO)   a type of international organization established by treaties between governments for purposes of conducting business between the nations making up its membership  
🗑
International nongovernmental organization (INGO)   a type of international organization established by agreements between the individuals or private organizations making up its membership  
🗑
Iron law of oligarchy   a theory that holds that large organizations tend toward centralization of power, making democracy difficult, if not impossible  
🗑
Leader   A person who is able to influence the behavior of other members of a group  
🗑
Network   all the direct and indirect connections that link a person or a group with other people or groups. A network confers economic and social benefits  
🗑
Oligarchy   rule by the few  
🗑
Organization   A group of people with an identifiable membership that engages in concerted collective actions to achieve a common purpose  
🗑
Out-group   a group toward which one feels antagonism and contempt  
🗑
Primary group   a small group characterized by face-to-face interaction, intimacy, and a strong, enduring sense of commitment  
🗑
Reference group   a group that provides a standard for judging one's attitudes or behavior  
🗑
Secondary group   large and impersonal group that often involves fleeting relationships  
🗑
Social aggregate   a simple collection of people who happen to be together in a particular place and time but do not significantly interact or identify with one another  
🗑
Social capital   the social knowledge and connections that enable people to accomplish their goals and extend their influence  
🗑
Social category   people who share a common characteristic, such as gender or occupation  
🗑
Social group   people who share a common identity and regularly interact with one another on the basis of shared expectations concerning behavior  
🗑
Surveillance   the supervision of activities in organizations, takes two forms: direct supervision and keeping employee records  
🗑
Surveillance society   a society in which information about the lives and activities of citizens is maintained by organizations  
🗑
Timetables   the means by which organizations regularize activities across time and space  
🗑
Transactional leader   a leader whose aim is to accomplish the group's tasks, get group members to do their jobs, and make certain that the group achieves its goals  
🗑
Transformational leader   a leader who instills in the members of the group a sense of mission or higher purpose, thereby changing the very nature of the group  
🗑
Triad   a group consisting of three persons  
🗑
Anomie   the lack of norms or clear standards of behavior. Robert Merton defines anomie as the strain put on an individual's behavior when accepted norms (such as becoming rich) conflicted with social reality (being poor)  
🗑
Community policing   A program that aims at crime prevention rather than at law enforcement through a police partnership with the community.  
🗑
Conflict theory   a theory that argues that deviance is deliberately chosen and often political. Individuals actively choose to engage in deviant behavior in response to the inequalities of the capitalist system.  
🗑
Control theory   a theory that views crime as a result of an imbalance between impulses toward criminal activity and the social or physical controls that deter it.  
🗑
Corporate crime   committed by large corporations in society.  
🗑
Crime   any behavior that breaks a law  
🗑
Cybercrime   criminal acts committed with the help of information technology.  
🗑
Deviance   nonconformity to a given set of norms that are accepted by a significant number of people in a community or society.  
🗑
Deviant subcultures   groups that deviate from larger society.  
🗑
Differential association theory   in areas of many different subcultures, some environments encourage illegal behaviors, whereas others do not.  
🗑
Labeling theory   the theory that holds that no act is intrinsically deviant (or normal). Instead, people in powerful positions define what is deviant.  
🗑
Laws   norms that are defined by governments and sanctions are used to enforce these laws.  
🗑
New criminology theory   analysis of crime and deviance is framed in terms of structure of society and the preservation of power among the ruling class.  
🗑
Organized crime   forms of activity that have some of the characteristics of orthodox business but are illegal.  
🗑
Psychopath   a person who is withdrawn, emotionless, and delights in violence.  
🗑
Sanctions   reactions that are meant to encourage a person to obey norms.  
🗑
Secondary deviance   a person's deviant behavior resulting from his/her inability to carry on as normal once he/she has been labeled a deviant.  
🗑
Shaming   a form of punishing criminal and deviant behavior that attempts to maintain the ties of the offender to the community. The fear of being shamed within one's community prevents one from committing crimes.  
🗑
White-collar crime   crimes carried out by people in more affluent sectors of society.  
🗑
Absolute poverty   a lack of the basic resources needed to maintain a healthy existence.  
🗑
Ascription   the basing of a person's social status on his or her family of origin, race, or sex.  
🗑
Capitalists   those who own the means of production.  
🗑
Caste society   A society in which different social levels are closed, so that all individuals must remain at the social level of their birth throughout life.  
🗑
Caste system   a social system in which one's social status is accorded at birth and held for life.  
🗑
Class   socioeconomic differences between groups of people that create differences in their material prosperity and power.  
🗑
Contradictory class locations   The dilemma one faces when he or she exploits and or dominates, but is also exploited and dominated.  
🗑
Culture of poverty theory   a theory that holds that because of an absence of motivation or a moral weakness, the poor cannot succeed in society. Thus, the poor are responsible for their own disadvantage.  
🗑
Dependency culture theory   a theory that posits that the welfare system erodes people's incentive to work.  
🗑
Endogamy   the forbidding of marriage or sexual relationships outside one's social group.  
🗑
Exchange mobility   a situation in which everyone has the same chance for social mobility, and a great deal of upward and downward mobility occurs.  
🗑
Feminization of poverty   a situation in which a greater and greater proportion of the poor are women.  
🗑
Homeless   people who have no place to sleep or reside and who either stay in free shelters on a temporary basis or sleep in places not meant for habitation, such as doorways or subway stations.  
🗑
Income   wages and salaries earned from paid occupations, plus unearned money from investments.  
🗑
Industrialism hypothesis   a theory that holds that achievement, or skill, rather than ascription characteristics become more important as societies become more open and more technologically advanced.  
🗑
Intergenerational mobility   movement across the generations.  
🗑
Intragenerational mobility   movement up or down the social scale within an individual's working life.  
🗑
Kuznets curve   A formula showing that inequality increases during the early stages of capitalist development, then declines, and eventually stabilizes at a relatively low level; advanced by the economist Simon Kuznets.  
🗑
Life chances   an individual's opportunities for achieving economic advancement.  
🗑
Lower class   A social class comprised of those whose household income is typically lower than $17,000 a year.  
🗑
Means of production   the means by which people earn a livelihood.  
🗑
Middle class   a segment of society composed of those working in white-collar and lower managerial occupations  
🗑
Pariah groups   Negative-status groups.  
🗑
Poverty line   an official governmental measure to measure those living in poverty.  
🗑
Relative poverty   assessing the gaps between the living conditions of some groups and those enjoyed by most of the population.  
🗑
Short-range downward mobility   Social mobility that occurs when an individual moves from one position in the class structure to another of nearly equal status.  
🗑
Slavery   A form of social stratification in which some people are literally owned by others as their property.  
🗑
Social closure   refers to the situation created by certain elite groups when they try to maintain exclusive control over resources in a society.  
🗑
Social exclusion   the processes by which individuals may become cut off from full involvement in the wider society.  
🗑
Social mobility   movement up or down the social scale.  
🗑
Social stratification   a social system that divides people socioeconomically into layers or strata.  
🗑
Status   the social honor or prestige that a particular group is accorded by other members of a society  
🗑
Structural mobility   upward mobility is made possible by an expansion of better-paid positions at the expense of poorly paid ones.  
🗑
Structured inequalities   social inequalities that result from patterns in the social structure  
🗑
Surplus value   in Marxist theory, the value of a worker's labor power left over when an employer has repaid the cost of hiring the worker  
🗑
Underclass   composed of those who are chronically poor and without a permanent occupation.  
🗑
Upper class   those who possess substantial amounts of wealth, especially inherited wealth.  
🗑
Vertical mobility   movement up or down the socioeconomic scale.  
🗑
Wealth   the material assets of an individual.  
🗑
Working class   those who work in blue-collar, or manual, occupations.  
🗑
Working poor   people who work but whose earnings are not high enough to lift them above poverty.  
🗑
Colonialism   a political-economic system under which powerful countries establish, for their own profit, rule over weaker peoples or countries.  
🗑
Core countries   the most advanced industrial countries, taking the lion's share of profits in the world economic system.  
🗑
Dependency development theory   under certain circumstances, poor countries can still develop economically, although only in ways shaped by their reliance on wealthier countries.  
🗑
Dependency theory   the poverty of low-income countries stems from their exploitation by wealthy countries, and the multinational corporations that are based in wealthy countries.  
🗑
Global commodity chains   worldwide networks of labor and production processes yielding a finished product.  
🗑
Global inequality   the systematic differences in wealth and power between countries.  
🗑
Market-oriented theory   a theory that argues that the best possible economic consequences result if individuals are free, uninhibited by any form of governmental constraint, to make their own economic decisions.  
🗑
Modernization theory   a theory that argues that cultural and institutional barriers to development explain the poverty of low-income societies.  
🗑
Neoliberalism   the economic belief that free market forces, achieved by minimizing governmental restrictions on business, provide the only route to economic growth.  
🗑
Newly industrializing economies   the rapidly growing economies of the world, particularly in East Asia, but also in Latin America.  
🗑
Peripheral countries   low-income, largely agricultural countries that are often manipulated by core countries for their own economic advantage.  
🗑
Semiperipheral countries   semi-industrialized, middle-income countries that extract profits from the more peripheral countries, in turn yielding profits to the core countries.  
🗑
State-centered development theory   appropriate government policies do not interfere with economic development, but rather can play a key role in bringing it about.  
🗑
World-system theory   a theory that argues that the world capitalist economic system must be understood as a single unit, not in terms of individual countries. It divides the world's economic systems into core, semiperiphery, and periphery countries.  
🗑


   

Review the information in the table. When you are ready to quiz yourself you can hide individual columns or the entire table. Then you can click on the empty cells to reveal the answer. Try to recall what will be displayed before clicking the empty cell.
 
To hide a column, click on the column name.
 
To hide the entire table, click on the "Hide All" button.
 
You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
 
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
If you know all the data on any row, you can temporarily remove it by tapping the trash can to the right of the row.

 
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.

  Normal Size     Small Size show me how
Created by: amberhill20
Popular Medical sets