Chapter 3: Nations and Society
Society: a collection of people bound by shared institutions that define how human relations should be conducted
Social identity: a sense of who a person is based on membership in social groups
Ethnic identity is…
A set of specific attributes and societal institutions that make one group of people culturally different from others.
Often based on customs, language, religion, or other factors.
Ascriptive, generally assigned at birth.
Not inherently political.
**Ethnic identity/ethnicity: (**specific) attributes and societal institutions that make one group of people culturally distinct from others.
Relevant social institutions may include language, religion, geographic location, customs, appearance, and history, among others.
Ascription: people are born into these identities, and it remains fairly stable throughout life.
However, borders between ethnic groups are often more “blurry” than we think!
Bosnia: Croats, Serbs, and Muslims
Main marker: religion
Rwanda: Hutu and Tutsi
Main marker: none discernible
National identity is…
A sense of belonging to a nation (a group that desires self-government through an independent state) and a belief in its political aspirations.
Often (but not always) derived from ethnic identity.
inherently political.
The basis for nationalism: pride in one’s people and the belief that they have a unique political destiny
Nation: a group that desires self-government, often through an independent state
National identity: an institution that binds people together through common political aspirations
Nationalism: pride in one’s people and the belief that they have a unique political destiny
Civic Nationalism: ‘the state precedes the nation’, i.e. a sense of national self-consciousness develops with the formation of the state
Ethnic Nationalism: ‘the nation precedes the state’, i.e. the state is carved around already existing boundaries, and others are excluded
Ethnocentric? Many argue these delineations were made to pathologize non-Western states.
Nations in the United States
Is there an American “nation”?
Native American tribes
Cherokee Nation
Others?
Nations in other countries
United Kingdom
Scottish independence
Irish Republicans
Spain
Catalans
Turkey
Kurds
Citizenship is…
An individual’s relation to the state; citizens swear allegiance to the state, and the state, in turn, provides certain benefits
Purely political and thus more easily changed than ethnic or national identity
The basis for patriotism: pride in one’s state and citizenship
Citizenship: an individual’s or group’s relation to the state; citizens swear allegiance to that state, and the state in return is obligated to provide rights to those citizens
Patriotism: pride in one’s state
Citizenship does not guarantee patriotism.
Nationalism
Pride in your people and a desire for statehood
Group might/might not have a state
Group may not like the current state very much
Patriotism
Pride in your state
Group has a state
Individuals may have weaker attachments to ethnic/national identities
Growing sentiment in France that the policy of laicité, or secularism, is threatened by some cultural practices associated with its Muslim minority, such as the wearing of face veils
The national identity debate was central to the UK’s vote to leave the European Union (Brexit); immigration was a top issue
U.S. President Donald Trump made immigration a major focus of his campaign, disparaging immigrants from Latin America and pledging to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border
A steep number of immigrants fleeing the civil war in Syria have ignited debate in Germany, long avoided since WWII, about threats to national identity
Primordialism: the nation originates in common culture and heritage, i.e. membership is assigned (or ought to be) at birth
Instrumentalism: the nations originate from groups coming together to gain advantages in competing for scarce resources
Constructivism: the nation is constructed through iterations of social practice that bring people together
Many identities emerged alongside the modern state.
Increased commerce, urbanization
New forms of social interactions
New institutions
State leaders often saw identity creation as a means of reinforcing their power.
Nation-state: A sovereign state encompassing one dominant nation that it claims to embody and represent
Some nations are divided
North and South Korea
Many states have multiple nations
United Kingdom, Nigeria
Some nations lack states of their own
Palestinians, Kurds
Not all ethnicities are nations, and not all nations are countries.
A few countries are dominated by a single ethnic group.
Japan
Egypt
Ethnic conflict: conflict between ethnic groups that struggle to achieve certain political or economic goals at each other’s expense
National conflict: conflict between groups who seek to gain (or prevent the other from gaining) sovereignty
Views of Ethnic and National Conflict
Societal explanations emphasize such issues as ethnic heterogeneity.
Economic explanations emphasize poverty and the struggle for natural or other resources.
Political explanations emphasize state capacity or autonomy and the type of regime.
All three sources combine to create conflict.
Extreme divisions
Political exclusion and corruption
Income inequality
Conflict over oil revenues
Political Attitudes are…
Concerned with the speed and methods of political change.
Generally classified as radical, liberal, conservative, or reactionary.
Particularistic: relative to the specific context of a given country. “Radical” in one country may be “conservative” in another.
Distinct from political ideologies.
Political attitudes: views regarding the necessary pace and scope of change in the balance between freedom and equality
Major categories:
Radicals prefer large institutional change.
Liberals prefer changes within institutions.
Conservatives are skeptical of change and favor the status quo.
Reactionaries seek to restore political, social, and economic institutions (real or imaginary).
Radicals
Favor dramatic, often revolutionary change to the existing political, social, or economic order
Believe that old institutions are broken and must be replaced
Example: Tunisia’s Arab Spring protestors
Liberals
Favor gradual, evolutionary change
Believe that existing institutions can create positive change
Example: U.S. Democrats
Conservatives
Skeptical of change; value continuity of institutions
Traditions that work should be respected
Fear change will have unintended effects
Example: Germany’s Christian Democrats
Reactionaries
View current orders as fundamentally unacceptable
Seek to return to “older” systems
Sometimes a fictional past
Example: “Make America Great Again”
The meaning of “conservative” varies:
A conservative attitude favors existing institutions and traditions, and resists change.
In some (but not all!) countries, conservative parties are identified with the right of the political spectrum.
Supporting current institutions can mean different things in different countries:
In the United Kingdom, many members of the Conservative Party campaigned and voted for Brexit.
In Romania, the Conservative Party supports European integration and EU membership.
Radicals are extreme liberals; reactionaries are extreme conservatives.
Helps explain why, in the United States, “liberal” sometimes means “left-wing.”
Radicals and reactionaries want dramatic change.
more willing to engage in violence.
Liberals and conservatives support existing institutions.
Political ideologies are…
Sets of political values regarding the fundamental goals of politics.
Exemplified by five dominant modern ideologies: liberalism, communism, social democracy, fascism, and anarchism.
Universalistic: not specific to one country or time.
Distinct from political attitudes.
Political ideologies: basic values held by an individual about the fundamental goals of politics or the ideal balance of freedom and equality
A few types (and their goals):
Liberalism: individual freedom
Communism: economic equality
Social democracy/socialism: balance between freedom and equality
Fascism: advancement of a superior group or race
Anarchism: elimination of state power
Limits state’s role in politics, society, and economy
People, as individuals, pursue their own interests.
Inspires liberal democracy
A system of political, social, and economic liberties, supported by competition, participation, and contestation
As a political attitude: favoring slow, evolutionary change
As a political ideology outside North America: favoring free markets and individualism, accepting greater inequality.
As a political ideology in North America: favoring a greater state role in limiting inequality; many outside the region would call this ideology “social democracy.”
As a political-economic system: favoring a limited state role in the economy.
Rejects the idea that personal freedom will ensure prosperity for the majority.
State’s role is to ensure wealth is shared.
No private property
Inspired twentieth-century communist states
Examples: Soviet Union, China, Cuba
Balances freedom and equality
Strong markets and role for private ownership
Strong state to regulate the industry and engage in social spending
Inspires many modern European states
Examples: Germany and the Scandinavian states
Rejects the ideas of freedom and equality
Believes in strict social hierarchies and inherent inequalities
Explicitly racist or ethnocentric
Inspired Fascist regimes, including Nazi Germany
Reemerging with far-right parties?
Views state as a threat to freedom and equality
Believes eliminating the state and private property would achieve both freedom and equality
Inspired…no states
The Democratic Party favors some social-democratic values, though they fall short on their European counterparts.
Possible reasons for resistance:
Preference for individual liberty over state power leads to skepticism of state-supported equality
Weak working-class solidarity needed for a strong, labor-oriented, social-democratic party
Growing inequality in the US could lead to an increase in support for social-democratic policies
Ideology | Tenets | Corresponding Political Attitude in North America |
---|---|---|
Liberalism | Favors a limited state role in society and economic activity; emphasizes a high degree of personal freedom over social equality. | Conservative |
Communism | Emphasizes limited personal freedom and a strong state in order to achieve social equality; property is wholly owned by the state and market forces are eliminated; state takes on task of production and other economic decisions. | Radical |
Social Democracy | Supports private property and markets but believes the state has a strong role to play in regulating the economy and providing benefits to the public; seeks to balance freedom and equality. | Liberal |
Fascism | Stresses a low degree of both personal freedom and equality in order to achieve a powerful state. | Reactionary |
Anarchism | Stresses the elimination of the state and private property as the only way to achieve a high degree of personal freedom and social equality for all. | Radical |
Many ideologies considered secular: an alternative to religion
Modern politics shift to “the privatization of religion”
Why the rejection of secularism in the last few decades?
Secular ideologies struggle with economic challenges, demographic shifts, and social changes.
Secularism is weakly institutionalized in some countries.
Fundamentalism: an ideology that seeks to make faith the sovereign authority
What it is:
A belief that seeks to unite religion and the state
Create a theocracy
Modern (not premodern) phenomena resulting from spiritual malaise
Can be radical, reactionary, or a combination
Can be from any religion
Culture: basic institutions that define a society
Road map to organize personal and social lives
Political culture: basic norms of political activity in a society
Road map to organize public/political life
Political Culture is…
The basic norms for political activity in a society.
A determining factor in what ideologies will dominate a country’s political regime.
Unique to a given country or group.
Distinct from political attitudes and ideologies.
Huntington’s The Clash of Civilizations
Culture as religiously based
Culture as permanent/unchanging
Inglehart’s World Values Survey
Major divisions:
Traditional versus secular-rational
Survival versus self-expression
Culture (values) varies across/within societies
Culture (values) change
Economic development shifts some societal values—but other social values are more resistant to change.
Ethnic identity and national identity are different but powerful identities.
Citizenship defines an individual’s relationship with the state.
Most modern identities have developed alongside the modern state.
Ethnic or national differences may lead to the conflict under certain conditions.
With regard to attitudes, radicals, liberals, conservatives, and reactionaries differ in their view toward established institutions.
With regard to ideology, liberals, communists, social democrats, fascists, anarchists, and fundamentalists prioritize different policy goals.
Cultural values shape a society’s ideology and attitudes and are resistant (but not immune) to change over time.
Society - complex human organization, a collection of people bound by shared institutions that define how human relations should be conducted
Ethnic identity - specific attributes and societal institutions that make one group of people culturally different from others
Nation - a group that desires self-government through an independent state
National identity - a sense of belonging to a nation and a belief in its political aspirations
Nationalism - pride in one’s people and the belief that they have a unique political destiny
Citizenship - an individual’s relationship to the state, wherein citizens swear allegiance to that state and the state in return is obligated to provide rights to those citizens.
Patriotism - pride in one’s state
Nation-state - a state encompassing one dominant nation that it claims to embody and represent
Ethnic conflict - a conflict in which different ethnic groups struggle to achieve certain political or economic goals at each other’s expense
National conflict - a conflict in which one or more groups within a country develop clear aspirations for political independence, clashing with others as a result
Political attitudes - description of one’s views regarding the speed and methods with which political changes should take place in a given society
Radicals - those with a political attitude that favors dramatic, often revolutionary change
Liberals - those with a political attitude that favors evolutionary change and believes that existing institutions can be instruments of positive change
Conservatives - those with a political attitude that is skeptical of change and supports the current order
Reactionaries - those who seek to restore the institutions of a real or an imagined earlier order
Political ideology - the basic values held by an individual about the fundamental goals of politics or the ideal balance of freedom and equality
Liberalism - a political attitude that favors evolutionary transformation; an ideology and political system that favors a limited state role in society and the economy, and places a high priority on individual political and economic freedom
Liberal democracy - a political system that promotes participation, competition, and liberty and emphasizes individual freedom and civil rights
Communism - a political-economic system in which all wealth and property are shared so as to eliminate exploitation, oppression, and, ultimately, the need for political institutions such as the state
Social democracy - a political-economic system in which freedom and equality are balanced through the state’s management of the economy and the provision of social expenditures
Fascism - a political ideology that asserts the superiority and inferiority of different groups of people and stresses a low degree of both freedom and equality in order to achieve a powerful state
Anarchism - a political ideology that stresses the elimination of the state and private property as a way to achieve both freedom and equality for all
Fundamentalism - a view of religion as absolute and inerrant that should be legally enforced by making faith the sovereign authority
Culture - basic institutions that define a society
Political culture - the basic norms for political activity in a society
Society: a collection of people bound by shared institutions that define how human relations should be conducted
Social identity: a sense of who a person is based on membership in social groups
Ethnic identity is…
A set of specific attributes and societal institutions that make one group of people culturally different from others.
Often based on customs, language, religion, or other factors.
Ascriptive, generally assigned at birth.
Not inherently political.
**Ethnic identity/ethnicity: (**specific) attributes and societal institutions that make one group of people culturally distinct from others.
Relevant social institutions may include language, religion, geographic location, customs, appearance, and history, among others.
Ascription: people are born into these identities, and it remains fairly stable throughout life.
However, borders between ethnic groups are often more “blurry” than we think!
Bosnia: Croats, Serbs, and Muslims
Main marker: religion
Rwanda: Hutu and Tutsi
Main marker: none discernible
National identity is…
A sense of belonging to a nation (a group that desires self-government through an independent state) and a belief in its political aspirations.
Often (but not always) derived from ethnic identity.
inherently political.
The basis for nationalism: pride in one’s people and the belief that they have a unique political destiny
Nation: a group that desires self-government, often through an independent state
National identity: an institution that binds people together through common political aspirations
Nationalism: pride in one’s people and the belief that they have a unique political destiny
Civic Nationalism: ‘the state precedes the nation’, i.e. a sense of national self-consciousness develops with the formation of the state
Ethnic Nationalism: ‘the nation precedes the state’, i.e. the state is carved around already existing boundaries, and others are excluded
Ethnocentric? Many argue these delineations were made to pathologize non-Western states.
Nations in the United States
Is there an American “nation”?
Native American tribes
Cherokee Nation
Others?
Nations in other countries
United Kingdom
Scottish independence
Irish Republicans
Spain
Catalans
Turkey
Kurds
Citizenship is…
An individual’s relation to the state; citizens swear allegiance to the state, and the state, in turn, provides certain benefits
Purely political and thus more easily changed than ethnic or national identity
The basis for patriotism: pride in one’s state and citizenship
Citizenship: an individual’s or group’s relation to the state; citizens swear allegiance to that state, and the state in return is obligated to provide rights to those citizens
Patriotism: pride in one’s state
Citizenship does not guarantee patriotism.
Nationalism
Pride in your people and a desire for statehood
Group might/might not have a state
Group may not like the current state very much
Patriotism
Pride in your state
Group has a state
Individuals may have weaker attachments to ethnic/national identities
Growing sentiment in France that the policy of laicité, or secularism, is threatened by some cultural practices associated with its Muslim minority, such as the wearing of face veils
The national identity debate was central to the UK’s vote to leave the European Union (Brexit); immigration was a top issue
U.S. President Donald Trump made immigration a major focus of his campaign, disparaging immigrants from Latin America and pledging to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border
A steep number of immigrants fleeing the civil war in Syria have ignited debate in Germany, long avoided since WWII, about threats to national identity
Primordialism: the nation originates in common culture and heritage, i.e. membership is assigned (or ought to be) at birth
Instrumentalism: the nations originate from groups coming together to gain advantages in competing for scarce resources
Constructivism: the nation is constructed through iterations of social practice that bring people together
Many identities emerged alongside the modern state.
Increased commerce, urbanization
New forms of social interactions
New institutions
State leaders often saw identity creation as a means of reinforcing their power.
Nation-state: A sovereign state encompassing one dominant nation that it claims to embody and represent
Some nations are divided
North and South Korea
Many states have multiple nations
United Kingdom, Nigeria
Some nations lack states of their own
Palestinians, Kurds
Not all ethnicities are nations, and not all nations are countries.
A few countries are dominated by a single ethnic group.
Japan
Egypt
Ethnic conflict: conflict between ethnic groups that struggle to achieve certain political or economic goals at each other’s expense
National conflict: conflict between groups who seek to gain (or prevent the other from gaining) sovereignty
Views of Ethnic and National Conflict
Societal explanations emphasize such issues as ethnic heterogeneity.
Economic explanations emphasize poverty and the struggle for natural or other resources.
Political explanations emphasize state capacity or autonomy and the type of regime.
All three sources combine to create conflict.
Extreme divisions
Political exclusion and corruption
Income inequality
Conflict over oil revenues
Political Attitudes are…
Concerned with the speed and methods of political change.
Generally classified as radical, liberal, conservative, or reactionary.
Particularistic: relative to the specific context of a given country. “Radical” in one country may be “conservative” in another.
Distinct from political ideologies.
Political attitudes: views regarding the necessary pace and scope of change in the balance between freedom and equality
Major categories:
Radicals prefer large institutional change.
Liberals prefer changes within institutions.
Conservatives are skeptical of change and favor the status quo.
Reactionaries seek to restore political, social, and economic institutions (real or imaginary).
Radicals
Favor dramatic, often revolutionary change to the existing political, social, or economic order
Believe that old institutions are broken and must be replaced
Example: Tunisia’s Arab Spring protestors
Liberals
Favor gradual, evolutionary change
Believe that existing institutions can create positive change
Example: U.S. Democrats
Conservatives
Skeptical of change; value continuity of institutions
Traditions that work should be respected
Fear change will have unintended effects
Example: Germany’s Christian Democrats
Reactionaries
View current orders as fundamentally unacceptable
Seek to return to “older” systems
Sometimes a fictional past
Example: “Make America Great Again”
The meaning of “conservative” varies:
A conservative attitude favors existing institutions and traditions, and resists change.
In some (but not all!) countries, conservative parties are identified with the right of the political spectrum.
Supporting current institutions can mean different things in different countries:
In the United Kingdom, many members of the Conservative Party campaigned and voted for Brexit.
In Romania, the Conservative Party supports European integration and EU membership.
Radicals are extreme liberals; reactionaries are extreme conservatives.
Helps explain why, in the United States, “liberal” sometimes means “left-wing.”
Radicals and reactionaries want dramatic change.
more willing to engage in violence.
Liberals and conservatives support existing institutions.
Political ideologies are…
Sets of political values regarding the fundamental goals of politics.
Exemplified by five dominant modern ideologies: liberalism, communism, social democracy, fascism, and anarchism.
Universalistic: not specific to one country or time.
Distinct from political attitudes.
Political ideologies: basic values held by an individual about the fundamental goals of politics or the ideal balance of freedom and equality
A few types (and their goals):
Liberalism: individual freedom
Communism: economic equality
Social democracy/socialism: balance between freedom and equality
Fascism: advancement of a superior group or race
Anarchism: elimination of state power
Limits state’s role in politics, society, and economy
People, as individuals, pursue their own interests.
Inspires liberal democracy
A system of political, social, and economic liberties, supported by competition, participation, and contestation
As a political attitude: favoring slow, evolutionary change
As a political ideology outside North America: favoring free markets and individualism, accepting greater inequality.
As a political ideology in North America: favoring a greater state role in limiting inequality; many outside the region would call this ideology “social democracy.”
As a political-economic system: favoring a limited state role in the economy.
Rejects the idea that personal freedom will ensure prosperity for the majority.
State’s role is to ensure wealth is shared.
No private property
Inspired twentieth-century communist states
Examples: Soviet Union, China, Cuba
Balances freedom and equality
Strong markets and role for private ownership
Strong state to regulate the industry and engage in social spending
Inspires many modern European states
Examples: Germany and the Scandinavian states
Rejects the ideas of freedom and equality
Believes in strict social hierarchies and inherent inequalities
Explicitly racist or ethnocentric
Inspired Fascist regimes, including Nazi Germany
Reemerging with far-right parties?
Views state as a threat to freedom and equality
Believes eliminating the state and private property would achieve both freedom and equality
Inspired…no states
The Democratic Party favors some social-democratic values, though they fall short on their European counterparts.
Possible reasons for resistance:
Preference for individual liberty over state power leads to skepticism of state-supported equality
Weak working-class solidarity needed for a strong, labor-oriented, social-democratic party
Growing inequality in the US could lead to an increase in support for social-democratic policies
Ideology | Tenets | Corresponding Political Attitude in North America |
---|---|---|
Liberalism | Favors a limited state role in society and economic activity; emphasizes a high degree of personal freedom over social equality. | Conservative |
Communism | Emphasizes limited personal freedom and a strong state in order to achieve social equality; property is wholly owned by the state and market forces are eliminated; state takes on task of production and other economic decisions. | Radical |
Social Democracy | Supports private property and markets but believes the state has a strong role to play in regulating the economy and providing benefits to the public; seeks to balance freedom and equality. | Liberal |
Fascism | Stresses a low degree of both personal freedom and equality in order to achieve a powerful state. | Reactionary |
Anarchism | Stresses the elimination of the state and private property as the only way to achieve a high degree of personal freedom and social equality for all. | Radical |
Many ideologies considered secular: an alternative to religion
Modern politics shift to “the privatization of religion”
Why the rejection of secularism in the last few decades?
Secular ideologies struggle with economic challenges, demographic shifts, and social changes.
Secularism is weakly institutionalized in some countries.
Fundamentalism: an ideology that seeks to make faith the sovereign authority
What it is:
A belief that seeks to unite religion and the state
Create a theocracy
Modern (not premodern) phenomena resulting from spiritual malaise
Can be radical, reactionary, or a combination
Can be from any religion
Culture: basic institutions that define a society
Road map to organize personal and social lives
Political culture: basic norms of political activity in a society
Road map to organize public/political life
Political Culture is…
The basic norms for political activity in a society.
A determining factor in what ideologies will dominate a country’s political regime.
Unique to a given country or group.
Distinct from political attitudes and ideologies.
Huntington’s The Clash of Civilizations
Culture as religiously based
Culture as permanent/unchanging
Inglehart’s World Values Survey
Major divisions:
Traditional versus secular-rational
Survival versus self-expression
Culture (values) varies across/within societies
Culture (values) change
Economic development shifts some societal values—but other social values are more resistant to change.
Ethnic identity and national identity are different but powerful identities.
Citizenship defines an individual’s relationship with the state.
Most modern identities have developed alongside the modern state.
Ethnic or national differences may lead to the conflict under certain conditions.
With regard to attitudes, radicals, liberals, conservatives, and reactionaries differ in their view toward established institutions.
With regard to ideology, liberals, communists, social democrats, fascists, anarchists, and fundamentalists prioritize different policy goals.
Cultural values shape a society’s ideology and attitudes and are resistant (but not immune) to change over time.
Society - complex human organization, a collection of people bound by shared institutions that define how human relations should be conducted
Ethnic identity - specific attributes and societal institutions that make one group of people culturally different from others
Nation - a group that desires self-government through an independent state
National identity - a sense of belonging to a nation and a belief in its political aspirations
Nationalism - pride in one’s people and the belief that they have a unique political destiny
Citizenship - an individual’s relationship to the state, wherein citizens swear allegiance to that state and the state in return is obligated to provide rights to those citizens.
Patriotism - pride in one’s state
Nation-state - a state encompassing one dominant nation that it claims to embody and represent
Ethnic conflict - a conflict in which different ethnic groups struggle to achieve certain political or economic goals at each other’s expense
National conflict - a conflict in which one or more groups within a country develop clear aspirations for political independence, clashing with others as a result
Political attitudes - description of one’s views regarding the speed and methods with which political changes should take place in a given society
Radicals - those with a political attitude that favors dramatic, often revolutionary change
Liberals - those with a political attitude that favors evolutionary change and believes that existing institutions can be instruments of positive change
Conservatives - those with a political attitude that is skeptical of change and supports the current order
Reactionaries - those who seek to restore the institutions of a real or an imagined earlier order
Political ideology - the basic values held by an individual about the fundamental goals of politics or the ideal balance of freedom and equality
Liberalism - a political attitude that favors evolutionary transformation; an ideology and political system that favors a limited state role in society and the economy, and places a high priority on individual political and economic freedom
Liberal democracy - a political system that promotes participation, competition, and liberty and emphasizes individual freedom and civil rights
Communism - a political-economic system in which all wealth and property are shared so as to eliminate exploitation, oppression, and, ultimately, the need for political institutions such as the state
Social democracy - a political-economic system in which freedom and equality are balanced through the state’s management of the economy and the provision of social expenditures
Fascism - a political ideology that asserts the superiority and inferiority of different groups of people and stresses a low degree of both freedom and equality in order to achieve a powerful state
Anarchism - a political ideology that stresses the elimination of the state and private property as a way to achieve both freedom and equality for all
Fundamentalism - a view of religion as absolute and inerrant that should be legally enforced by making faith the sovereign authority
Culture - basic institutions that define a society
Political culture - the basic norms for political activity in a society