Mechanical and Organic Solidarity
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Mechanical and Organic Solidarity
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Distinction appears in Durkheim's 1893 work The Division of Labour in Society. Mechanical and Organic solidarity are ways in which social solidarity is fostered.

Mechanical Solidarity

Characterised by:

  • A small, isolated homogenous population
  • Little or no specialisation
  • Division of labour based on cooperation
  • System where social links are based on custom, obligation and emotion.
  • Shared Values and Beliefs
    • A system of social institutions in which religion is dominant
    • Produced a system of social cohesion
    • Legal system based on repressive sanctions, which serves to reaffirm traditional values
    • As a result of the dominance of a few shared values, society can mobilise en masse.
  • Little individual freedom
    • System in which individualism is undeveloped
    • The status of the individual is determined by kinship

Organic Solidarity

Characterised by:

  • Larger population spread out over a larger geographical area
  • Complex division of labour
    • Individuals are dependent on others to perform economic functions that they themselves can not peform
    • Performs a key role in ensuring interdepence and development of social ties
    • Replaces interdependence based on kinsip, religious ties or shared values
  • Much individual freedom
    • Individual the object of legal rights and freedoms
    • Individual status determined by occupation rather than kinship ties
  • Legal System
    • Based on restitutive sanctions
    • Redress social wrongs by restoring situation to previous state

Other Notes in this Category

  1. Durkheim - Crime as a Normal, rather than Pathological Phenomenon
  2. Durkheim and Social Facts
  3. Durkheim and the Division of Labour in Society
  4. Mechanical and Organic Solidarity

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