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Neil J. Smelser is a University of
California, Berkeley
sociologist who studied
collective behavior.
He
received his undergraduate degree from Harvard
University
in 1952. From 1952 to 1954, he was a Rhodes scholar at Oxford
University
where he
studied philosophy, politics and economics. He earned his
Ph.D in sociology from Harvard in 1958, and was also a junior
fellow of the Society of Fellows. At the young age of 24, He
co-authored "Economy and Society" with
Talcott Parsons. He was the fifth director
of the
Center for
Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences from 1994 to 2001. He
retired from the University of California in 1994 and is now an
emeritus University Professor.
His '
value added theory' (or
strain theory) argued that six things were necessary for a social
movement to emerge:
- Structural conduciveness - things that make or allow certain
behaviors possible (e.g. spatial proximity)
- Structural strain - something (inequality, injustice) must
strain society
- Generalized belief - explanation; participants have to come to
an understanding of what the problem is
- Precipitating factors - spark to ignite the flame
- Mobilization for action - people need to become organized
- Failure of social control - how the authorities react (or
don't)
Citation
Swedberg,
Richard, "Economics and Sociology: Redefining Their Boundaries:
Conversations with Economists and Sociologists", Princeton
University Press
1990.
External links