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      • Role set is a concept in sociology and psychology that refers to the cluster of roles that an individual occupies in various social contexts. The concept was first introduced by Robert Merton in 1957 and has been used by researchers to study the structure and process of social life.
      encyclopedia.arabpsychology.com › role-set
  1. Nov 21, 2023 · A role set describes various roles and relationships as a consequence of a person's societal status. A role set can include connected behaviors, rights, obligations,...

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  3. Jul 27, 2016 · The basic idea is that individuals have various roles in life and that these roles come with prescriptions on how individuals should behave. Banton 1996 defines a role as “the expected behaviour associated with a social position” (p. 749, cited under General Overviews ).

  4. May 6, 2021 · The concept of social role has all but disappeared from contemporary sociology. This article aims to recover the concept through a consideration of competing accounts of social normativity, particularly those emerging from Parsons, Foucault, Bourdieu and practice theory.

    • Lisa Smyth
    • 2021
  5. Mar 12, 2018 · Social roles are a socially defined pattern of behavior that is expected of persons who occupy a certain social position or belong to a particular social category. The construct of social roles is central to the social sciences, and it came into general use during the 1920s and 1930s by analogy to the theatre.

    • janine.bosak@dcu.ie
  6. Jan 1, 2022 · Definition. A social role is defined as a position in a group (e.g., spouse, parent, employee) and an associated set of expected behaviors associated with that position and within a specified social structure (Burke 1991; Thoits 1991).

    • s_k182@txstate.edu
  7. social category. The construct of social roles is central to the social sciences, and it came into general use during the 1920s and 1930s by anal-ogy to the theatre. Social life occurs as perfor-mances by social actors, who are constrained by the scripts of their roles; the same actor can per-form very different roles in different plays, and

  8. A social position (also referred to as a social status) is defined by Merton in The role-set: Problems in sociological theory as “a position in a social system involving designated rights and obligations” (p. 110, referred to in *Additional General Terminology*).

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