z-logo
Premium
Defensiveness and social structure: the ideology of Catholic school trustees*
Author(s) -
WESTHUES KENNETH
Publication year - 1983
Publication title -
canadian review of sociology/revue canadienne de sociologie
Language(s) - French
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.414
H-Index - 35
eISSN - 1755-618X
pISSN - 1755-6171
DOI - 10.1111/j.1755-618x.1983.tb00889.x
Subject(s) - political science , humanities , opposition (politics) , ethnology , sociology , law , philosophy , politics
La structure sociale, dans le sens officiel et juridique du terme, est concue comme un facteur de valeur explicative independante dans l'etude des groupes humains. Il est affirme que: 1/ moins un groupe est reconnu ou appuye par la loi, plus il sera defensif; et 2/ les membres du groupe auront tendance a acquiescer a la structure de controle decretee par la loi, meme si cette structure s'oppose a celle des traditions propres au groupe. Ces propositions ont ete evaluees d'apres un sondage preleve parmi un echantillon d'administrateurs d'ecoles catholiques au Canada. Une analyse multi‐classificative revele que plus le degre de securite des ecoles catholiques dans la juridiction provinciale est eleve, moins les idees et attitudes des administrateurs sont defensives, en mesurant les secteurs suivants: l'accent sur la discipline, l'opposition a la mobilisation des enseignants, et l'opposition a l'engagement de l'Eglise sur des questions qui touchent le public. L'analyse demontre egalement que plus la loi sape le controle du clerge dans les ecoles catholiques, moins l'attitude des administrateurs aura des tendances clericalistes. Des implications sont suggerees tant pour la sociologie du catholicisme que pour la sociologie en general. Social structure in a formal, legal sense is conceptualized as a factor of independent explanatory value in the study of human groups. First, it is argued that the less recognition and support a group enjoys by law, the more defensive it will be, second, that group members will tend to acquiesce to the control structure decreed by law, even when it contradicts that implied by the group's own traditions. These propositions are evaluated in light of survey data on a random sample of Canadian Catholic school trustees. Multiple classification analysis reveals that the greater the security of Catholic schools in provincial law, the less defensive the trustees' ideas and attitudes, as measured by emphasis on discipline, opposition to teacher mobilization, and opposition to church involvement in public issues. Analysis also shows that the more the law undermines clerical control of Catholic schools, the less clericalist are the trustees' attitudes. Implications are suggested for both the sociology of Catholicism and sociology in general.

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here