General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
Social Group & Societies
1. StudentDevelopment Institute
Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Languages
Social Group and Societies
Lecturer : chey ratha
Students :Kum visal
An som oun
Kong kea
Pi sey
Kim mouy
Batch II, Group I, Year III, Semester I
Academic year 2016-2017
2. CONTENT
I. Social Group and Societies
II. The Transformation of Societies
III. Hunting and Gathering Societies
IV. Pastoral and Horticultural Societies
V. Postindustrial societies
VI. Conclusion
3. I.SocialGroups & Societies
Social groups are everywhere and are a basic part of human
life; everywhere you look there seems to be groups of people!
A main focus of sociology is the study of these social groups.
A social group consists of two or more: The people who
regularly interact and share a sense of unity and
common identity.
• Primary Groups
A social Group
Secondary Groups
1
4. I. Social Groups & Societies (con-)
Primary Groups are typically small scale, include
intimate relationships, and are usually long lasting.
Secondary Group are another type of social group.
They have the opposite characteristics of primary
groups.
Friends Nuclear Family 2
2
5. I. Society (con-)
SOCIETY is a large group of people who live together in an
organized way, making decisions about how to do things and
sharing the work that needs to be done. All the people in a country,
or in several similar countries, can be referred to as a society
3
3
6. II. The transformation of Societies
The transformation of Societies is the concept of
society transformation in the social sciences refers to the
change of society's systematic characteristics.
4
7. II. The transformation of Societies (con-)
The first Revolution The second Revolution
The third Revolution The fourth Revolution
TransformationofSocieties
3
5
8. II. The transformation of Societies (con-)
Agricultural ( invention of
Plow)
Domestic( Plants
and animals
Industrial ( invention of the steam
engine)
Information ( invention of the microchip)
6
9. III. Hunting and Gathering Societies
Societies that rely primarily or exclusively on huntin
-g wild animals, fishing, and gathering wild fruits
nuts, and vegetables to support their diet.
Until humans began to domesticate plants and anim
als about ten thousand- year.
7
10. IV. Pastoral and Horticulture
Some group found that they could tame and breed some of animals that they
hunted. Other discovered that they could cultivate plants.
Pastoral Societies
Pastoral Society is a social group of
pastoralism, and is typical nomadic.
Horticultural Societies
Horticultural Society is an organization devote
to the study and culture of cultivated plants.
Domestication
revolution
is the process of
increasing human
control over the
breeding of wild plants
and animals in order to
select for traits that
make them more useful
for human needs.
Animals Plants
8
11. IV. Postindustrial societies
• Is a stage in a society's development during which the economy
transitions from one that primarily provides goods to one that
primarily provides services. In other words, the service sector,
made up of people such as nurses, teachers, researchers, social
workers, and lawyers, among others, accounts for more of the
economic growth and wealth than the manufacturing sector,
which is made up of people such as construction workers, textile
mill workers, food manufacturers, and production workers.
9
12. VI. Conclusion
We have already learned the all subjects,
especially Cultural Studies and we have many
opportunities in your imagination of mindset. As we
have had the meaningful result of the topic it is
increasingly starting understanding of the unit two. We
could see an effective of the topic, we are increasingly
enhancing and brainstorming of social group and
societies. And we could understand the revolution of
the people and transform of the societies in our society
and in the whole word we have eventually known and
updated the living to be living in modern world.
10