ABSTRACT

An understanding of the complex consequences of social processes and social design activities necessitates a holistic systemic perspective, systematised in the classic structural-functional research tradition, which is presented in Functionalist Construction Work in Social Science.

In contrast to fragmented discussions of functionalism and functional analyses, the approach here covers a span ranging from ontological, epistemological and primarily methodological aspects of functionalism. The functionalist tradition in social science is placed in a historic context, and problematised from a philosophy of science perspective. Unique here is a detailed account of four classic functionalist research programmes with a discussion of functionalism, not primarily as a worldview, but as systematic knowledge-generating research strategies. In addition to descriptive and causal questions, the importance of a further research question is demonstrated, i.e., the identification of crucial problems of social organisation.

Functionalist research strategies and functional analysis are of interest for social scientists and students in sociology, political science, and social anthropology. Moreover, the book is relevant for researchers and students of philosophy of science and social science methodology

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

part I|64 pages

The functionalist tradition

chapter Chapter 1|24 pages

The designed world

chapter Chapter 2|26 pages

The functionalist school and functional practice

part II|147 pages

Functionalist programmes

chapter Chapter 4|42 pages

Bronisław Malinowski and cultural biology

chapter Chapter 5|37 pages

Radcliffe-Brown

Social anthropology as comparative sociology

chapter Chapter 7|30 pages

Robert K. Merton

Functional tensions in a divided world

part III|50 pages

The universe of functionality

chapter Chapter 8|48 pages

Functional design and functional reasoning

Conclusion