• Flu Shots and Face Masks - Moral Panic and Social Control Theory

  • 2020/07/19
  • 再生時間: 39 分
  • ポッドキャスト

Flu Shots and Face Masks - Moral Panic and Social Control Theory

  • サマリー

  • Episode 49

    Question: Do you think there is merit to the idea that governments and societal authorities use social control theory and moral panic to shape public behavior at the expense of personal freedoms and liberties?

    We have previously discussed the psychology of masks and the impact on social interaction, empathy, and personal inhibition. This time the discussion focuses on the sociology of these issues, and the use of social controls to establish, implement, and normalize desired behaviors within the population.

    In order to discuss the relationship between the issues of vaccination and face masks, and understand the current divide in public opinion on both topics, we must understand the terms and tools being used to execute this shaping of social norms.

    This time, on Conspiracy Theoryology, we discussion Social Control Theory and Moral Panic. Two concepts that may just help us to understand the public fascination, and social divide occurring over the issues of mandatory vaccination and face mask policies.

    Conspiracy Theoryology Store - https://www.zazzle.com/store/theoryologypod

    www.conspiracytheoryology.com

    email - contact@conspiracytheoryology.com

    Twitter - @TheoryologyPod | Facebook - @TheoryologyPodcast | Patreon - www.patreon.com/conspiracytheoryology

    Music is by adamhenrygarcia.bandcamp.com

    Links:

    Stop Smoker-Shaming

    Background of Smoking Bans

    Secondhand smoke isn't as bad as we thought.

    Secondhand Smoke and Cancer

    Forms Of Social Control | Informal Social Control | Social Control | Social Control Theory | Social Control Definition

    How Sociologists Define Social Control

    Moral panic

    Moral Panic: Who Benefits From Public Fear?

    A Sociological Understanding of Moral Panic

    Moral Panics and the Media – ReviseSociology

    Self-Deception I: Rationalization

    Vaccines Protect Everyone

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あらすじ・解説

Episode 49

Question: Do you think there is merit to the idea that governments and societal authorities use social control theory and moral panic to shape public behavior at the expense of personal freedoms and liberties?

We have previously discussed the psychology of masks and the impact on social interaction, empathy, and personal inhibition. This time the discussion focuses on the sociology of these issues, and the use of social controls to establish, implement, and normalize desired behaviors within the population.

In order to discuss the relationship between the issues of vaccination and face masks, and understand the current divide in public opinion on both topics, we must understand the terms and tools being used to execute this shaping of social norms.

This time, on Conspiracy Theoryology, we discussion Social Control Theory and Moral Panic. Two concepts that may just help us to understand the public fascination, and social divide occurring over the issues of mandatory vaccination and face mask policies.

Conspiracy Theoryology Store - https://www.zazzle.com/store/theoryologypod

www.conspiracytheoryology.com

email - contact@conspiracytheoryology.com

Twitter - @TheoryologyPod | Facebook - @TheoryologyPodcast | Patreon - www.patreon.com/conspiracytheoryology

Music is by adamhenrygarcia.bandcamp.com

Links:

Stop Smoker-Shaming

Background of Smoking Bans

Secondhand smoke isn't as bad as we thought.

Secondhand Smoke and Cancer

Forms Of Social Control | Informal Social Control | Social Control | Social Control Theory | Social Control Definition

How Sociologists Define Social Control

Moral panic

Moral Panic: Who Benefits From Public Fear?

A Sociological Understanding of Moral Panic

Moral Panics and the Media – ReviseSociology

Self-Deception I: Rationalization

Vaccines Protect Everyone

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