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In the social sciences there is a standing debate over the primacy of structure or agency in shaping human behaviour. Structure is the recurrent patterned arrangements which influence or limit the choices and opportunities available.Agency is the capacity of individuals to act independently and to make their own free choices. The structure versus agency debate may be understood as an issue of socialization against autonomy in determining whether an individual acts as a free agent or in a manner dictated by social structure.
Structure, socialization and autonomy
The debate over the primacy of structure or of agency relates to an issue at the heart of both classical and contemporary sociological theory: the question of social ontology: "What is the social world made of?" "What is a cause of the social world, and what is an effect?" "Do social structures determine an individual's behaviour or does human agency?"
Structural functionalists such as Émile Durkheim see structure and hierarchy as essential in establishing the very existence of society. Theorists such as Karl Marx, by contrast, emphasize that the social structure can act to the detriment of the majority of individuals in a society. In both these instances "structure" may refer to something both material (or "economic") and cultural (i.e. related to norms, customs, traditions and ideologies).
Some theorists put forward that what we know as our social existence is largely determined by the overall structure of society. The perceived agency of individuals can also mostly be explained by the operation of this structure. Theoretical systems aligned with this view include:
- structuralism
- some forms of functionalism
- Orthodox Marxism
All of these schools in this context can be seen as forms of holism – the notion that "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts".
On the other hand, other theorists stress the capacity of individual "agents" to construct and reconstruct their worlds. In this sense the individual can be viewed as more influential than the system. Theoretical systems aligned with this view include:
- methodological individualism
- social phenomenology
- interactionism
- ethnomethodology
Lastly, a third option, taken by many modern social theorists, attempts to find a point of balance between the two previous positions. They see structure and agency as complementary forces – structure influences human behaviour, and humans are capable of changing the social structures they inhabit. Structuration issue one prominent example of this view.
The first approach (emphasizing the importance of societal structure) dominated in classical sociology.[citation needed] Theorists saw unique aspects of the social world that could not be explained simply by the sum of the individuals present. Durkheim strongly believed that the collective had emergent properties of its own and saw the need for a science which would deal with this emergence. The second approach (methodological individualism, etc.), however, also has a well-established position in social science. Many theorists still follow this course (economists, for example, tend to disregard any kind of holism).
The central debate, therefore, pits theorists committed to the notions of methodological holism against those committed to methodological individualism. The first notion, methodological holism, is the idea that actors are socialized and embedded into social structures and institutions that constrain, or enable, and generally shape the individuals' dispositions towards, and capacities for, action, and that this social structure should be taken as primary and most significant. The second notion, methodological individualism, is the idea that actors are the central theoretical and ontological elements in social systems, and social structure is an epiphenomenon, a result and consequence of the actions and activities of interacting individuals.
Major theorists
Georg Simmel
Georg Simmel (1858–1918) was one of the first generation of German nonpositivist sociologists. His studies pioneered the concepts of social structure and agency. His most famous works today include The Metropolis and Mental Life and The Philosophy of Money.
Norbert Elias
Norbert Elias (1897–1990) was a German sociologist whose work focused on the relationship between power, behaviour, emotion, and knowledge over time. He significantly shaped what is called process sociology or figurational sociology.
Talcott Parsons
Talcott Parsons (1902–1979) was an American sociologist and the main theorist of action theory (misleadingly called "structural functionalism") in sociology from the 1930s in the United States. His works analyze social structure but in terms of voluntary action and through patterns of normative institutionalization by codifying its theoretical gestalt into a system-theoretical framework based on the idea of living systems and cybernetic hierarchy. For Parsons there is no structure–agency problem. It is a pseudo-problem. His development of Max Weber's means-end action structure is summarized in Instrumental and value-rational action
Pierre Bourdieu
Pierre Bourdieu (1930–2002) was a French theorist who presented his theory of practice on the dichotomic understanding of the relation between agency and structure in a great number of publications, beginning with in 1972, where he presented the concept of habitus.[citation needed] His book Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste (1979), was named as one of the 20th century's 10 most important works of sociology by the International Sociological Association.
The key concepts in Bourdieu's work are habitus, field, and capital. The agent is socialized in a "field", an evolving set of roles and relationships in a social domain, where various forms of "capital" such as prestige or financial resources are at stake. As the agent accommodates to their roles and relationships in the context of their position in the field, they internalize relationships and expectations for operating in that domain. These internalized relationships and habitual expectations and relationships form, over time, the habitus.
Bourdieu's work attempts to reconcile structure and agency, as external structures are internalized into the habitus while the actions of the agent externalize interactions between actors into the social relationships in the field. Bourdieu's theory, therefore, is a dialectic between "externalizing the internal", and "internalizing the external".
Berger and Luckmann
Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann in their Social Construction of Reality (1966) saw the relationship between structure and agency as dialectical. Society forms the individuals who create society – forming a continuous loop.[verification needed]
James Coleman
The sociologist James Samuel Coleman famously diagramed the link between macrosociological phenomena and individual behaviour in what is commonly referred to as Coleman's Boat. A macro-level phenomenon is described as instigating particular actions by individuals, which results in a subsequent macro-level phenomenon. In this way, individual action is taken in reference to a macro-sociological structure, and that action (by many individuals) results in change to that macro-structure.
Anthony Giddens
Contemporary sociology has generally aimed toward a reconciliation of structure and agency as concepts. Anthony Giddens has developed structuration theory in such works as The Constitution of Society (1984). He presents a developed attempt to move beyond the dualism of structure and agency and argues for the "duality of structure" – where social structure is both the medium and the outcome of social action, and agents and structures as mutually constitutive entities with "equal ontological status". For Giddens, an agent's common interaction with structure, as a system of norms, is described as structuration. The term reflexivity is used to refer to the ability of an agent to consciously alter his or her place in the social structure; thus globalization and the emergence of the 'post-traditional' society might be said to allow for "greater social reflexivity". Social and political sciences are therefore important because social knowledge, as self-knowledge, is potentially emancipatory.[verification needed]
Klaus Hurrelmann
His access to research on structure and agency is characterized by socialization theory. Central to the theory is the life-long interaction between the individual and his/her longing for freedom and autonomy, and society with its pressure of order and structure. As he states in his "Model of Productive Processing of Reality (PPR)", personality "does not form independently from society any of its functions or dimensions but is continuously being shaped, in a concrete, historically conveyed life world, throughout the entire space of the life span". The PPR model places the human subject in a social and ecological context that must be absorbed and processed subjectively. The human being as an autonomous subject has the lifelong task to harmonize the processes of social integration and personal individualization. This task is mastered in specific steps that are typical for the respective age and the achieved developmental stage ("developmental tasks").
Roberto Unger
The social theorist and legal philosopher Roberto Mangabeira Unger developed the thesis of negative capability to address this problem of agency in relation to structure. In his work on false necessity – or anti-necessitarian social theory – Unger recognizes the constraints of structure and its molding influence upon the individual, but at the same time finds the individual able to resist, deny, and transcend their context. The varieties of this resistance are negative capability. Unlike other theories of structure and agency, negative capability does not reduce the individual to a simple actor possessing only the dual capacity of compliance or rebellion, but rather sees him or her as able to partake in a variety of activities of self empowerment.
Recent developments
A recent development in the debate is the critical realist structure/agency perspective embodied in Roy Bhaskar's transformational model of social action (TMSA) which he later expanded into his concept of four-planar social being. A major difference between Giddens' structuration theory and the TMSA is that the TMSA includes a temporal element (time). The TMSA has been further advocated and applied in other social science fields by additional authors, for example in economics by Tony Lawson and in sociology by Margaret Archer. In 2005, the Journal of Management Studies debated the merits of critical realism.
Kenneth Wilkinson in the Community in Rural America took an interactional/field theoretical perspective focusing on the role of community agency in contributing to the emergence of community.
With critical psychology as a framework, the Danish psychologist Ole Dreier proposes in his book Psychotherapy in Everyday Life that we may best conceptualize persons as participants in social practices (that constitute social structures) who can either reproduce or change these social practices. This indicates that neither participants, nor social practices can be understood when looked at in isolation (in fact, this undermines the very idea of trying to do so), since practice and structure is co-created by participants and since the participants can only be called so, if they participate in a social practice.
The structure/agency debate continues to evolve, with contributions such as 's Sociological Theory: What Went Wrong? and Margaret Archer's Realist Social Theory: The Morphogenetic Approach continuing to push the ongoing development of structure/agency theory. Work in information systems by Mutch (2010) has emphasized Archer's Realist Social Theory as well as Robert Archer's (2018) application in the field of education policy and organization theory. In entrepreneurship a discussion between Sarason et al. and Mole & Mole (2010) used Archer's theory to critique structuration by arguing that starting a new business organization needs to be understood in the context of social structure and agency. However, this depends upon one's view of structure, which differs between Giddens and Archer. Hence if strata in social reality have different ontologies, then they must be viewed as a dualism. Moreover, agents have causal power, and ultimate concerns which they try to fallibly put into practice. Mole and Mole propose entrepreneurship as the study of the interplay between the structures of a society and the agents within it.
Purported differences in approach between European and American thinkers
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (July 2009) |
While the structure–agency debate has been a central issue in social theory, and recent theoretical reconciliation attempts have been made, structure–agency theory has tended to develop more in European countries by European theorists, while social theorists from the United States have tended to focus instead on the issue of integration between macrosociological and microsociological perspectives. George Ritzer examines these issues (and surveys the structure agency debate) in greater detail in his book Modern Sociological Theory (2000).
See also
- Actor–network theory
- Base and superstructure
- Free will
- Great man theory
- Nature versus nurture
- Principal–agent problem
References
Footnotes
- Barker 2005, p. 448.
- Bourdieu 1977; Bourdieu 1990; Hurrelmann 1988.
- Swartz 2004, pp. 360–361.
- Berger & Luckmann 1966.
- Jary & Jary 1995, pp. 664, 774.
- Stoltz, Dustin (25 January 2014). "Diagrams of Theory: Coleman's Boat". DustinStoltz.com. Dustin Stoltz. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
- Giddens 1984.
- Gauntlett 2002, pp. 93–96.
- Hurrelmann 1988, p. 42.
- Hurrelmann 1988.
- Lovin & Perry 1990; Unger 2004, p. 282.
- Bhaskar 2014.
- Bhaskar 2008.
- Contu & Willmott 2005; Reed 2005a; Reed 2005b.
- Wilkinson 1991.
- Dreier 2008, ch. 2.
- Mouzelis 1995.
- Archer 1995.
- Mutch 2010.
- Archer, Robert (2018). Education Policy and Realist Social Theory. doi:10.4324/9780203166536. ISBN 9781134493548.
- Archer, Robert (2000). "The Place of Culture in Organization Theory: Introducing the Morphogenetic Approach". Organization. 7 (1): 95–128. doi:10.1177/135050840071006. S2CID 145352259.
- Mole & Mole 2010.
- Ritzer 2000.
Bibliography
- Archer, Margaret S. (1995). Realist Social Theory: The Morphogenetic Approach. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511557675. ISBN 978-0-521-48176-2.
- Archer, Robert (2018). Education Policy and Realist Social Theory: Primary Teachers, Child-Centred Philosophy and the New Managerialism. London & New York: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9780203166536. ISBN 978-0-415-26839-4.
- Barker, Chris (2005). Cultural Studies: Theory and Practice. London: Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-4156-9.
- Berger, Peter L.; Luckmann, Thomas (1966). The Social Construction of Reality: A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge. Garden City, New York: Anchor Books. ISBN 978-0-385-05898-8.
- Bhaskar, Roy (2008). Dialectic: The Pulse of Freedom. London: Routledge.
- ——— (2014). The Possibility of Naturalism: A Philosophical Critique of the Contemporary Human Sciences (4th ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-79889-2.
- Bourdieu, Pierre (1977). Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press (published 2013). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511812507. ISBN 978-0-511-81250-7.
- ——— (1990). The Logic of Practice. Cambridge, England: Polity Press.
- Contu, Alessia; Willmott, Hugh (2005). "You Spin Me Round: The Realist Turn in Organization and Management Studies". Journal of Management Studies. 42 (8): 1645–1662. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6486.2005.00560.x. ISSN 1467-6486.
- Dreier, Ole (2008). Psychotherapy in Everyday Life. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
- Gauntlett, David (2002). Media, Gender, and Identity: An Introduction. London: Routledge (published 2004). ISBN 978-0-415-18960-6.
- Giddens, Anthony (1984). The Constitution of Society. Cambridge, England: Polity Press.
- Hurrelmann, Klaus (1988). Social Structure and Personality Development. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press (published 2009). ISBN 978-0-521-35747-0.
- Jary, David; Jary, Julia Jary (1995). Collins Dictionary of Sociology (2nd ed.). Glasgow: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-470804-1.
- Lawson, Tony (1997). Economics and Reality. London: Routledge.
- Lovin, Robin W.; Perry, Michael J., eds. (1990). Critique and Construction: A Symposium on Roberto Unger's Politics. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
- Mole, Kevin F.; Mole, Miranda (2010). "Entrepreneurship as the Structuration of Individual and Opportunity: A Response Using a Critical Realist Perspective" (PDF). Journal of Business Venturing. 25 (2): 230–237. doi:10.1016/j.jbusvent.2008.06.002. ISSN 0883-9026.
- Mouzelis, Nicos (1995). Sociological Theory: What Went Wrong?. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415076944.
- Mutch, Alistair (2010). "Technology, Organization, and Structure – A Morphogenetic Approach". Organization Science. 21 (2): 507–520. doi:10.1287/orsc.1090.0441. ISSN 1526-5455.
- Reed, Michael (2005a). "The Realist Turn in Organization and Management Studies". Journal of Management Studies. 42 (8): 1621–1644. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6486.2005.00559.x. ISSN 1467-6486.
- ——— (2005b). "Doing the Loco-Motion: Response to Contu and Willmott's Commentary on 'The Realist Turn in Organization and Management Studies'". Journal of Management Studies. 42 (8): 1663–1673. doi:10.1111/j.1467-6486.2005.00561.x. ISSN 1467-6486.
- Ritzer, George (2000). Modern Sociological Theory (5th ed.). Boston, Massachusetts: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-229604-4.
- Swartz, David L. (2004). "From Critical Sociology to Public Intellectual: Pierre Bourdieu & Politics". In Swartz, David L.; Zolberg, Vera L. (eds.). After Bourdieu: Influence, Critique, Elaboration. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer (published 2005). pp. 333–364. doi:10.1007/1-4020-2589-0_13. ISBN 978-1-4020-2589-1.
- Unger, Roberto Mangabeira (2004). False Necessity: Anti-Necessitarian Social Theory in the Service of Radical Democracy (rev. ed.). London: Verso. ISBN 978-1-85984-331-4.
- Wilkinson, Kenneth P. (1991). The Community in Rural America. Contributions in Sociology. Vol. 95. New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-26467-2.
Further reading
- Archer, Margaret S. (2003). Structure, Agency and the Internal Conversation. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139087315. ISBN 978-1-139-08731-5.
- Bhaskar, Roy (1989). Reclaiming Reality. London: Verso. ISBN 9780860912378.
- Bourdieu, Pierre; Wacquant, Loïc J. D. (1992). An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-06741-4.
- Elias, Norbert (1978). What Is Sociology?. London: Hutchinson.
- Giddens, Anthony (1976). New Rules of Sociological Method.
- Giddens, Anthony (1976). New Rules of Sociological Method.
- Orlando, Vittorio; Conrad, Maximilian (2024). "Agency and structure in the age of European disintegration". Frontiers in Political Science. 6. doi:10.3389/fpos.2024.1383485.
- Turner, Jonathan H. (1991). The Structure of Sociological Theory (5th ed.). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Company.
- Unger, Roberto Mangabeira (1987). Social Theory: Its Situation and Its Task. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521329750.
This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these messages This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message This article cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help by providing page numbers for existing citations April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message In the social sciences there is a standing debate over the primacy of structure or agency in shaping human behaviour Structure is the recurrent patterned arrangements which influence or limit the choices and opportunities available Agency is the capacity of individuals to act independently and to make their own free choices The structure versus agency debate may be understood as an issue of socialization against autonomy in determining whether an individual acts as a free agent or in a manner dictated by social structure Structure socialization and autonomyThe debate over the primacy of structure or of agency relates to an issue at the heart of both classical and contemporary sociological theory the question of social ontology What is the social world made of What is a cause of the social world and what is an effect Do social structures determine an individual s behaviour or does human agency Structural functionalists such as Emile Durkheim see structure and hierarchy as essential in establishing the very existence of society Theorists such as Karl Marx by contrast emphasize that the social structure can act to the detriment of the majority of individuals in a society In both these instances structure may refer to something both material or economic and cultural i e related to norms customs traditions and ideologies Some theorists put forward that what we know as our social existence is largely determined by the overall structure of society The perceived agency of individuals can also mostly be explained by the operation of this structure Theoretical systems aligned with this view include structuralism some forms of functionalism Orthodox Marxism All of these schools in this context can be seen as forms of holism the notion that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts On the other hand other theorists stress the capacity of individual agents to construct and reconstruct their worlds In this sense the individual can be viewed as more influential than the system Theoretical systems aligned with this view include methodological individualism social phenomenology interactionism ethnomethodology Lastly a third option taken by many modern social theorists attempts to find a point of balance between the two previous positions They see structure and agency as complementary forces structure influences human behaviour and humans are capable of changing the social structures they inhabit Structuration issue one prominent example of this view The first approach emphasizing the importance of societal structure dominated in classical sociology citation needed Theorists saw unique aspects of the social world that could not be explained simply by the sum of the individuals present Durkheim strongly believed that the collective had emergent properties of its own and saw the need for a science which would deal with this emergence The second approach methodological individualism etc however also has a well established position in social science Many theorists still follow this course economists for example tend to disregard any kind of holism The central debate therefore pits theorists committed to the notions of methodological holism against those committed to methodological individualism The first notion methodological holism is the idea that actors are socialized and embedded into social structures and institutions that constrain or enable and generally shape the individuals dispositions towards and capacities for action and that this social structure should be taken as primary and most significant The second notion methodological individualism is the idea that actors are the central theoretical and ontological elements in social systems and social structure is an epiphenomenon a result and consequence of the actions and activities of interacting individuals Major theoristsGeorg Simmel Georg Simmel 1858 1918 was one of the first generation of German nonpositivist sociologists His studies pioneered the concepts of social structure and agency His most famous works today include The Metropolis and Mental Life and The Philosophy of Money Norbert Elias Norbert Elias 1897 1990 was a German sociologist whose work focused on the relationship between power behaviour emotion and knowledge over time He significantly shaped what is called process sociology or figurational sociology Talcott Parsons Talcott Parsons 1902 1979 was an American sociologist and the main theorist of action theory misleadingly called structural functionalism in sociology from the 1930s in the United States His works analyze social structure but in terms of voluntary action and through patterns of normative institutionalization by codifying its theoretical gestalt into a system theoretical framework based on the idea of living systems and cybernetic hierarchy For Parsons there is no structure agency problem It is a pseudo problem His development of Max Weber s means end action structure is summarized in Instrumental and value rational action Pierre Bourdieu Pierre Bourdieu 1930 2002 was a French theorist who presented his theory of practice on the dichotomic understanding of the relation between agency and structure in a great number of publications beginning with in 1972 where he presented the concept of habitus citation needed His book Distinction A Social Critique of the Judgement of Taste 1979 was named as one of the 20th century s 10 most important works of sociology by the International Sociological Association The key concepts in Bourdieu s work are habitus field and capital The agent is socialized in a field an evolving set of roles and relationships in a social domain where various forms of capital such as prestige or financial resources are at stake As the agent accommodates to their roles and relationships in the context of their position in the field they internalize relationships and expectations for operating in that domain These internalized relationships and habitual expectations and relationships form over time the habitus Bourdieu s work attempts to reconcile structure and agency as external structures are internalized into the habitus while the actions of the agent externalize interactions between actors into the social relationships in the field Bourdieu s theory therefore is a dialectic between externalizing the internal and internalizing the external Berger and Luckmann Peter L Berger and Thomas Luckmann in their Social Construction of Reality 1966 saw the relationship between structure and agency as dialectical Society forms the individuals who create society forming a continuous loop verification needed James Coleman The sociologist James Samuel Coleman famously diagramed the link between macrosociological phenomena and individual behaviour in what is commonly referred to as Coleman s Boat A macro level phenomenon is described as instigating particular actions by individuals which results in a subsequent macro level phenomenon In this way individual action is taken in reference to a macro sociological structure and that action by many individuals results in change to that macro structure Anthony Giddens Contemporary sociology has generally aimed toward a reconciliation of structure and agency as concepts Anthony Giddens has developed structuration theory in such works as The Constitution of Society 1984 He presents a developed attempt to move beyond the dualism of structure and agency and argues for the duality of structure where social structure is both the medium and the outcome of social action and agents and structures as mutually constitutive entities with equal ontological status For Giddens an agent s common interaction with structure as a system of norms is described as structuration The term reflexivity is used to refer to the ability of an agent to consciously alter his or her place in the social structure thus globalization and the emergence of the post traditional society might be said to allow for greater social reflexivity Social and political sciences are therefore important because social knowledge as self knowledge is potentially emancipatory verification needed Klaus Hurrelmann His access to research on structure and agency is characterized by socialization theory Central to the theory is the life long interaction between the individual and his her longing for freedom and autonomy and society with its pressure of order and structure As he states in his Model of Productive Processing of Reality PPR personality does not form independently from society any of its functions or dimensions but is continuously being shaped in a concrete historically conveyed life world throughout the entire space of the life span The PPR model places the human subject in a social and ecological context that must be absorbed and processed subjectively The human being as an autonomous subject has the lifelong task to harmonize the processes of social integration and personal individualization This task is mastered in specific steps that are typical for the respective age and the achieved developmental stage developmental tasks Roberto Unger The social theorist and legal philosopher Roberto Mangabeira Unger developed the thesis of negative capability to address this problem of agency in relation to structure In his work on false necessity or anti necessitarian social theory Unger recognizes the constraints of structure and its molding influence upon the individual but at the same time finds the individual able to resist deny and transcend their context The varieties of this resistance are negative capability Unlike other theories of structure and agency negative capability does not reduce the individual to a simple actor possessing only the dual capacity of compliance or rebellion but rather sees him or her as able to partake in a variety of activities of self empowerment Recent developmentsA recent development in the debate is the critical realist structure agency perspective embodied in Roy Bhaskar s transformational model of social action TMSA which he later expanded into his concept of four planar social being A major difference between Giddens structuration theory and the TMSA is that the TMSA includes a temporal element time The TMSA has been further advocated and applied in other social science fields by additional authors for example in economics by Tony Lawson and in sociology by Margaret Archer In 2005 the Journal of Management Studies debated the merits of critical realism Kenneth Wilkinson in the Community in Rural America took an interactional field theoretical perspective focusing on the role of community agency in contributing to the emergence of community With critical psychology as a framework the Danish psychologist Ole Dreier proposes in his book Psychotherapy in Everyday Life that we may best conceptualize persons as participants in social practices that constitute social structures who can either reproduce or change these social practices This indicates that neither participants nor social practices can be understood when looked at in isolation in fact this undermines the very idea of trying to do so since practice and structure is co created by participants and since the participants can only be called so if they participate in a social practice The structure agency debate continues to evolve with contributions such as s Sociological Theory What Went Wrong and Margaret Archer s Realist Social Theory The Morphogenetic Approach continuing to push the ongoing development of structure agency theory Work in information systems by Mutch 2010 has emphasized Archer s Realist Social Theory as well as Robert Archer s 2018 application in the field of education policy and organization theory In entrepreneurship a discussion between Sarason et al and Mole amp Mole 2010 used Archer s theory to critique structuration by arguing that starting a new business organization needs to be understood in the context of social structure and agency However this depends upon one s view of structure which differs between Giddens and Archer Hence if strata in social reality have different ontologies then they must be viewed as a dualism Moreover agents have causal power and ultimate concerns which they try to fallibly put into practice Mole and Mole propose entrepreneurship as the study of the interplay between the structures of a society and the agents within it Purported differences in approach between European and American thinkersThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2009 While the structure agency debate has been a central issue in social theory and recent theoretical reconciliation attempts have been made structure agency theory has tended to develop more in European countries by European theorists while social theorists from the United States have tended to focus instead on the issue of integration between macrosociological and microsociological perspectives George Ritzer examines these issues and surveys the structure agency debate in greater detail in his book Modern Sociological Theory 2000 See alsoSociety portalActor network theory Base and superstructure Free will Great man theory Nature versus nurture Principal agent problemReferencesFootnotes Barker 2005 p 448 Bourdieu 1977 Bourdieu 1990 Hurrelmann 1988 Swartz 2004 pp 360 361 Berger amp Luckmann 1966 Jary amp Jary 1995 pp 664 774 Stoltz Dustin 25 January 2014 Diagrams of Theory Coleman s Boat DustinStoltz com Dustin Stoltz Retrieved 13 April 2018 Giddens 1984 Gauntlett 2002 pp 93 96 Hurrelmann 1988 p 42 Hurrelmann 1988 Lovin amp Perry 1990 Unger 2004 p 282 Bhaskar 2014 Bhaskar 2008 Contu amp Willmott 2005 Reed 2005a Reed 2005b Wilkinson 1991 Dreier 2008 ch 2 Mouzelis 1995 Archer 1995 Mutch 2010 Archer Robert 2018 Education Policy and Realist Social Theory doi 10 4324 9780203166536 ISBN 9781134493548 Archer Robert 2000 The Place of Culture in Organization Theory Introducing the Morphogenetic Approach Organization 7 1 95 128 doi 10 1177 135050840071006 S2CID 145352259 Mole amp Mole 2010 Ritzer 2000 Bibliography Archer Margaret S 1995 Realist Social Theory The Morphogenetic Approach Cambridge England Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9780511557675 ISBN 978 0 521 48176 2 Archer Robert 2018 Education Policy and Realist Social Theory Primary Teachers Child Centred Philosophy and the New Managerialism London amp New York Routledge doi 10 4324 9780203166536 ISBN 978 0 415 26839 4 Barker Chris 2005 Cultural Studies Theory and Practice London Sage ISBN 978 0 7619 4156 9 Berger Peter L Luckmann Thomas 1966 The Social Construction of Reality A Treatise in the Sociology of Knowledge Garden City New York Anchor Books ISBN 978 0 385 05898 8 Bhaskar Roy 2008 Dialectic The Pulse of Freedom London Routledge 2014 The Possibility of Naturalism A Philosophical Critique of the Contemporary Human Sciences 4th ed London Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 79889 2 Bourdieu Pierre 1977 Outline of a Theory of Practice Cambridge England Cambridge University Press published 2013 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511812507 ISBN 978 0 511 81250 7 1990 The Logic of Practice Cambridge England Polity Press Contu Alessia Willmott Hugh 2005 You Spin Me Round The Realist Turn in Organization and Management Studies Journal of Management Studies 42 8 1645 1662 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6486 2005 00560 x ISSN 1467 6486 Dreier Ole 2008 Psychotherapy in Everyday Life Cambridge England Cambridge University Press Gauntlett David 2002 Media Gender and Identity An Introduction London Routledge published 2004 ISBN 978 0 415 18960 6 Giddens Anthony 1984 The Constitution of Society Cambridge England Polity Press Hurrelmann Klaus 1988 Social Structure and Personality Development Cambridge England Cambridge University Press published 2009 ISBN 978 0 521 35747 0 Jary David Jary Julia Jary 1995 Collins Dictionary of Sociology 2nd ed Glasgow HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 470804 1 Lawson Tony 1997 Economics and Reality London Routledge Lovin Robin W Perry Michael J eds 1990 Critique and Construction A Symposium on Roberto Unger s Politics Cambridge England Cambridge University Press Mole Kevin F Mole Miranda 2010 Entrepreneurship as the Structuration of Individual and Opportunity A Response Using a Critical Realist Perspective PDF Journal of Business Venturing 25 2 230 237 doi 10 1016 j jbusvent 2008 06 002 ISSN 0883 9026 Mouzelis Nicos 1995 Sociological Theory What Went Wrong London Routledge ISBN 9780415076944 Mutch Alistair 2010 Technology Organization and Structure A Morphogenetic Approach Organization Science 21 2 507 520 doi 10 1287 orsc 1090 0441 ISSN 1526 5455 Reed Michael 2005a The Realist Turn in Organization and Management Studies Journal of Management Studies 42 8 1621 1644 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6486 2005 00559 x ISSN 1467 6486 2005b Doing the Loco Motion Response to Contu and Willmott s Commentary on The Realist Turn in Organization and Management Studies Journal of Management Studies 42 8 1663 1673 doi 10 1111 j 1467 6486 2005 00561 x ISSN 1467 6486 Ritzer George 2000 Modern Sociological Theory 5th ed Boston Massachusetts McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 229604 4 Swartz David L 2004 From Critical Sociology to Public Intellectual Pierre Bourdieu amp Politics In Swartz David L Zolberg Vera L eds After Bourdieu Influence Critique Elaboration Dordrecht Netherlands Springer published 2005 pp 333 364 doi 10 1007 1 4020 2589 0 13 ISBN 978 1 4020 2589 1 Unger Roberto Mangabeira 2004 False Necessity Anti Necessitarian Social Theory in the Service of Radical Democracy rev ed London Verso ISBN 978 1 85984 331 4 Wilkinson Kenneth P 1991 The Community in Rural America Contributions in Sociology Vol 95 New York Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 26467 2 Further readingArcher Margaret S 2003 Structure Agency and the Internal Conversation Cambridge England Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 CBO9781139087315 ISBN 978 1 139 08731 5 Bhaskar Roy 1989 Reclaiming Reality London Verso ISBN 9780860912378 Bourdieu Pierre Wacquant Loic J D 1992 An Invitation to Reflexive Sociology Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 06741 4 Elias Norbert 1978 What Is Sociology London Hutchinson Giddens Anthony 1976 New Rules of Sociological Method Giddens Anthony 1976 New Rules of Sociological Method Orlando Vittorio Conrad Maximilian 2024 Agency and structure in the age of European disintegration Frontiers in Political Science 6 doi 10 3389 fpos 2024 1383485 Turner Jonathan H 1991 The Structure of Sociological Theory 5th ed Belmont CA Wadsworth Publishing Company Unger Roberto Mangabeira 1987 Social Theory Its Situation and Its Task Cambridge England Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521329750