Dr. Sirleaf Social Construction Corruption
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Transcript Dr. Sirleaf Social Construction Corruption
THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION
OF Corruption: The Liberian Case
Study.
Presented to:
Strayer University
Department of Sociology
Presented by:
Amos M. D. Sireaf, Ph.D.
Professor of Sociology
February 26, 2010
An organization's compensation practices can have serious effects on its competitive advantage. However, to develop a competitive advantage i
Mary F. Sirleaf
There must be different levels of pay in the relative worth among a set of jobs, because among workers, there are different levels of responsi
•Two employees perform the same job and each received exemplary performance ratings. Discuss whether it is fair to give one employee a s
While the concept of measuring performance in service businesses may seem difficult, it serves as a link between additional pay and rewards
•Discuss the basic concept of insurance and how this concept applies to health care.
Obviously, insurance has been around for a very long time basically to circumvent the potential of financial losses in case of unforeseen circu
Mary F. Sirleaf
concept of insurance and how it applies to health care, originated from the fact that, life is full of uncertainties and it is well understood that
•Except for the Family and Medical Leave Act, the remaining legally required benefits were conceived decades ago. Describe the changes in
Historically, the legally required benefits mandated by the Social Security Act of 1935, was largely prompted by the rapid growth of industr
Mary F. Sirleaf
virtually all U.S. employees, who view companies’ benefits as entitlements that serve as motivational tools to enhance workers’ productivity,
INTRODUCTION
This presentation seeks to articulate that the history of Correction is
also the history of a Scientific- cultural of poverty, papered to be
imbedded in the DNA of the Liberian socio- cultural, and
transplanted historic social and political structures. Corruption in
Liberia is an idea from mankind, specially, It is distinctly a Western
emulated and learned behavioral philosophy.
No society is composed of genetically “pure” people.
Society tends to rank themselves into hierarchies based on race with one race
assumed to be better than another. We are in fact one race - human.
In essence, Social Construction of race is
a cultural of fallacy based on hypothetical or
conditional propositions.
INTRODUCTION
Race & Ethnicity are Social Constructs
depending on the nations and the minds set of
its occupants.
Race becomes a social construct when it
draws an artificial boundaries among
people, nations, and that artificially divides
people into distinct groups based on
characteristics.
THEORIES
A. That your present situations were meant to be;
therefore, there has to be a policy put in place
to sustain your situation.
B. That you appear to be an expendable subject or
useful and workable instrumental, or you were
not meant to exist, or you were meant to exist
on certain frame of reference… or a product of
natural selection (Charles Darwin)
JUSTIFICATIONS
1. Since it turns that all humans are the descended from
a small number of African ancestors in our recent
evolutionary past, believing in profound differences
between the human races is as ridiculous as believing
in a flat earth.
Social Construction of Race is a fallacy
JUSTIFICATIONS
2.
We were not or we are not born with racist attitudes,
values, culture, or beliefs. It is an institutional and
interdisciplinary frame of instruction or cultural
conditioning dynamic. This Cultural Conditioning can
in time becomes a Social Construction of Reality
based on the theory of the Self-fulfilling Prophecy.
JUSTIFICATIONS
Even though we are born and we were born into
social, ethnic, cultural, and religious contexts, we
have not made enough efforts nor acquired enough
information about knowing ourselves and or knowing
one another. (As an African from Liberia)…
JUSTIFICATIONS
It is through the process of socialization, cultural
consciousness, and social interaction that we acquire
sets of attitudes, values, and beliefs that may
contribute to the way we see one another from an
ethno-cultural and racist perspective.
DISCUSSION
What does it mean to say that race is “socially
constructed or it is a Social Construction of Reality?
What do we mean when we say that anything is
socially constructed?
CONCLUSION
Ethnicity becomes a social construct when it divides
people into smaller social groups based on a shared
sense of group membership, values, behavioral
patterns, language, political and economic interests,
history, and geography.
An understanding of the social construction of “race”
in the US is essential for an understanding of the
impact of events and change.
Thanks: Q&A
REFERENCES
Atran, Scott (1990), Cognitive Foundations of Natural History. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Banton, Michael (1970), “The Concept of Racism”, in Sami Zubaida (ed.), Race and
Racialism. London: Tavistock, 17–34.
Bettinger, Robert L. (1991), Hunter-Gatherers: Archaeological and Evolutionary
Theory. New York: Plenum.
Boyd, Robert, and Peter J. Richerson (1985), Culture and the Evolutionary Process.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Boyer, Pascal (2001), Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious
Thought. New York: Basic Books.
Brown, Ryan A., and George J. Armelagos (2001), “Apportionment of Racial
Diversity: A Review”, Evolutionary Anthropology 10: 34–40.
Wikipedia. (2010) Charles Dawin Retrieved from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles
_Darwin#Publication_of_the_theory_of_natural_selection on February 24, 2010.