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Structuration theory

The theory of structuration is a social theory of the creation and reproduction of social systems that is based on the analysis of both structure and agents (see structure and agency), without giving primacy to either. Furthermore, in structuration theory, neither micro- nor macro-focused analysis alone is sufficient. The theory was proposed by sociologist Anthony Giddens, most significantly in The Constitution of Society,[1] which examines phenomenology, hermeneutics, and social practices at the inseparable intersection of structures and agents. Its proponents have adopted and expanded this balanced position.[2] Though the theory has received much criticism, it remains a pillar of contemporary sociological theory.[3]

Premises and origins edit

Sociologist Anthony Giddens adopted a post-empiricist frame for his theory, as he was concerned with the abstract characteristics of social relations.[according to whom?] This leaves each level more accessible to analysis via the ontologies which constitute the human social experience: space and time ("and thus, in one sense, 'history'.")[1]: 3  His aim was to build a broad social theory which viewed "[t]he basic domain of study of the social sciences... [as] neither the experience of the individual actor, nor the existence of any form of societal totality, but social practices ordered across space and time."[1]: 189  His focus on abstract ontology accompanied a general and purposeful neglect of epistemology or detailed research methodology.

Giddens used concepts from objectivist and subjectivist social theories, discarding objectivism's focus on detached structures, which lacked regard for humanist elements and subjectivism's exclusive attention to individual or group agency without consideration for socio-structural context. He critically engaged classical nineteenth and early twentieth century social theorists such as Auguste Comte, Karl Marx, Max Weber, Émile Durkheim, Alfred Schutz, Robert K. Merton, Erving Goffman, and Jürgen Habermas.[2] Thus, in many ways, structuration was "an exercise in clarification of logical issues."[4]: viii  Structuration drew on other fields, as well: "He also wanted to bring in from other disciplines novel aspects of ontology that he felt had been neglected by social theorists working in the domains that most interested him. Thus, for example, he enlisted the aid of geographers, historians and philosophers in bringing notions of time and space into the central heartlands of social theory."[2]: 16  Giddens hoped that a subject-wide "coming together" might occur which would involve greater cross-disciplinary dialogue and cooperation, especially between anthropologists, social scientists and sociologists of all types, historians, geographers, and even novelists. Believing that "literary style matters", he held that social scientists are communicators who share frames of meaning across cultural contexts through their work by utilising "the same sources of description (mutual knowledge) as novelists or others who write fictional accounts of social life."[1]: 285 

Structuration differs from its historical sources. Unlike structuralism it sees the reproduction of social systems not "as a mechanical outcome, [but] rather ... as an active constituting process, accomplished by, and consisting in, the doings of active subjects."[4]: 121  Unlike Althusser's concept of agents as "bearers" of structures, structuration theory sees them as active participants. Unlike the philosophy of action and other forms of interpretative sociology, structuration focuses on structure rather than production exclusively. Unlike Saussure's production of an utterance, structuration sees language as a tool from which to view society, not as the constitution of society—parting with structural linguists such as Claude Lévi-Strauss and generative grammar theorists such as Noam Chomsky. Unlike post-structuralist theory, which put similar focus on the effects of time and space, structuration does not recognise only movement, change and transition. Unlike functionalism, in which structures and their virtual synonyms, "systems", comprise organisations, structuration sees structures and systems as separate concepts. Unlike Marxism, structuration avoids an overly restrictive concept of "society" and Marxism's reliance on a universal "motor of history" (i.e. class conflict), its theories of societal "adaptation", and its insistence on the working class as universal class and socialism as the ultimate form of modern society. Finally, "structuration theory cannot be expected to furnish the moral guarantees that critical theorists sometimes purport to offer."[3]: 16 

Main ideas edit

Duality of structure edit

Giddens observed that in social analysis, the term structure referred generally to "rules and resources" and more specifically to "the structuring properties allowing the 'binding' of time-space in social systems". These properties make it possible for similar social practices to exist across time and space and that lend them "systemic" form.[1]: 17  Agents—groups or individuals—draw upon these structures to perform social actions through embedded memory, called memory traces. Memory traces are thus the vehicle through which social actions are carried out. Structure is also, however, the result of these social practices. Thus, Giddens conceives of the duality of structure as being:

...the essential recursiveness of social life, as constituted in social practices: structure is both medium and outcome of reproduction of practices. Structure enters simultaneously into the constitution of the agent and social practices, and 'exists' in the generating moments of this constitution.[5]: 5 

Giddens uses "the duality of structure" (i.e. material/ideational, micro/macro) to emphasize structure's nature as both medium and outcome. Structures exist both internally within agents as memory traces that are the product of phenomenological and hermeneutic inheritance[2]: 27  and externally as the manifestation of social actions. Similarly, social structures contain agents and/or are the product of past actions of agents. Giddens holds this duality, alongside "structure" and "system," in addition to the concept of recursiveness, as the core of structuration theory.[1]: 17  His theory has been adopted by those with structuralist inclinations, but who wish to situate such structures in human practice rather than to reify them as an ideal type or material property. (This is different, for example, from actor–network theory which appears to grant a certain autonomy to technical artifacts.)

Social systems have patterns of social relation that change over time; the changing nature of space and time determines the interaction of social relations and therefore structure. Hitherto, social structures or models were either taken to be beyond the realm of human control—the positivistic approach—or posit that action creates them—the interpretivist approach. The duality of structure emphasizes that they are different sides to the same central question of how social order is created.

Gregor McLennan suggested renaming this process "the duality of structure and agency", since both aspects are involved in using and producing social actions.[6]: 322 

Cycle of structuration edit

The duality of structure is essentially a feedbackfeedforward[clarification needed] process whereby agents and structures mutually enact social systems, and social systems in turn become part of that duality.[citation needed] Structuration thus recognizes a social cycle. In examining social systems, structuration theory examines structure, modality, and interaction. The "modality" (discussed below) of a structural system is the means by which structures are translated into actions.

Interaction edit

Interaction is the agent's activity within the social system, space and time. "It can be understood as the fitful yet routinized occurrence of encounters, fading away in time and space, yet constantly reconstituted within different areas of time-space."[1]: 86  Rules can affect interaction, as originally suggested by Goffman. "Frames" are "clusters of rules which help to constitute and regulate activities, defining them as activities of a certain sort and as subject to a given range of sanctions."[1]: 87  Frames are necessary for agents to feel "ontological security, the trust that everyday actions have some degree of predictability. Whenever individuals interact in a specific context they address—without any difficulty and in many cases without conscious acknowledgement—the question: "What is going on here?" Framing is the practice by which agents make sense of what they are doing.[1]

Routinization edit

Structuration theory is centrally concerned with order as "the transcending of time and space in human social relationships".[1] Institutionalized action and routinization are foundational in the establishment of social order and the reproduction of social systems. Routine persists in society, even during social and political revolutions, where daily life is greatly deformed, "as Bettelheim demonstrates so well, routines, including those of an obnoxious sort, are re-established."[1]: 87  Routine interactions become institutionalized features of social systems via tradition, custom and/or habit, but this is no easy societal task and it "is a major error to suppose that these phenomena need no explanation. On the contrary, as Goffman (together with ethnomethodology) has helped to demonstrate, the routinized character of most social activity is something that has to be 'worked at' continually by those who sustain it in their day-to-day conduct."[1] Therefore, routinized social practices do not stem from coincidence, "but the skilled accomplishments of knowledgeable agents."[2]: 26 

Trust and tact are essential for the existence of a "basic security system, the sustaining (in praxis) of a sense of ontological security, and [thus] the routine nature of social reproduction which agents skilfully organize. The monitoring of the body, the control and use of face in 'face work'—these are fundamental to social integration in time and space."[1]: 86 

Explanation edit

When I utter a sentence I draw upon various syntactical rules (sedimented in my practical consciousness of the language) in order to do so. These structural features of the language are the medium whereby I generate the utterance. But in producing a syntactically correct utterance I simultaneously contribute to the reproduction of the language as a whole. ...The relation between moment and totality for social theory... [involves] a dialectic of presence and absence which ties the most minor or trivial forms of social action to structural properties of the overall society, and to the coalescence of institutions over long stretches of historical time.[1]: 24 

Thus, even the smallest social actions contribute to the alteration or reproduction of social systems. Social stability and order is not permanent; agents always possess a dialectic of control (discussed below) which allows them to break away from normative actions. Depending on the social factors present, agents may cause shifts in social structure.

The cycle of structuration is not a defined sequence; it is rarely a direct succession of causal events. Structures and agents are both internal and external to each other, mingling, interrupting, and continually changing each other as feedbacks and feedforwards occur. Giddens stated, "The degree of "systemness" is very variable. ...I take it to be one of the main features of structuration theory that the extension and 'closure' of societies across space and time is regarded as problematic."[1]: 165 

The use of "patriot" in political speech reflects this mingling, borrowing from and contributing to nationalistic norms and supports structures such as a police state, from which it in turn gains impact.

Structure and society edit

Structures are the "rules and resources" embedded in agents' memory traces. Agents call upon their memory traces of which they are "knowledgeable" to perform social actions. "Knowledgeability" refers to "what agents know about what they do, and why they do it."[1] Giddens divides memory traces (structures-within-knowledgeability[2]) into three types:

  • Domination (power): Giddens also uses "resources" to refer to this type. "Authoritative resources" allow agents to control persons, whereas "allocative resources" allow agents to control material objects.
  • Signification (meaning): Giddens suggests that meaning is inferred through structures. Agents use existing experience to infer meaning. For example, the meaning of living with mental illness comes from contextualized experiences.[7]
  • Legitimation (norms): Giddens sometimes uses "rules" to refer to either signification or legitimation. An agent draws upon these stocks of knowledge via memory to inform him or herself about the external context, conditions, and potential results of an action.

When an agent uses these structures for social interactions, they are called modalities and present themselves in the forms of facility (domination), interpretive scheme/communication (signification) and norms/sanctions (legitimation).

Thus, he distinguishes between overall "structures-within-knowledgeability" and the more limited and task-specific "modalities" on which these agents subsequently draw when they interact.

The duality of structures means that structures enter "simultaneously into the constitution of the agent and social practices, and 'exists' in the generating moments of this constitution."[5]: 5  "Structures exist paradigmatically, as an absent set of differences, temporally "present" only in their instantiation, in the constituting moments of social systems."[5]: 64  Giddens draws upon structuralism and post-structuralism in theorizing that structures and their meaning are understood by their differences.

Agents and society edit

Giddens' agents follow previous psychoanalysis work done by Sigmund Freud and others.[1] Agency, as Giddens calls it, is human action. To be human is to be an agent (not all agents are human). Agency is critical to both the reproduction and the transformation of society. Another way to explain this concept is by what Giddens calls the "reflexive monitoring of actions."[8] "Reflexive monitoring" refers to agents' ability to monitor their actions and those actions' settings and contexts. Monitoring is an essential characteristic of agency. Agents subsequently "rationalize," or evaluate, the success of those efforts. All humans engage in this process, and expect the same from others. Through action, agents produce structures; through reflexive monitoring and rationalization, they transform them. To act, agents must be motivated, must be knowledgeable must be able to rationalize the action; and must reflexively monitor the action.

Agents, while bounded in structure, draw upon their knowledge of that structural context when they act. However, actions are constrained by agents' inherent capabilities and their understandings of available actions and external limitations. Practical consciousness and discursive consciousness inform these abilities. Practical consciousness is the knowledgeability that an agent brings to the tasks required by everyday life, which is so integrated as to be hardly noticed. Reflexive monitoring occurs at the level of practical consciousness.[9] Discursive consciousness is the ability to verbally express knowledge. Alongside practical and discursive consciousness, Giddens recognizes actors as having reflexive, contextual knowledge, and that habitual, widespread use of knowledgeability makes structures become institutionalized.[1]

Agents rationalize, and in doing so, link the agent and the agent's knowledgeability. Agents must coordinate ongoing projects, goals, and contexts while performing actions. This coordination is called reflexive monitoring and is connected to ethnomethodology's emphasis on agents' intrinsic sense of accountability.[1]

The factors that can enable or constrain an agent, as well as how an agent uses structures, are known as capability constraints include age, cognitive/physical limits on performing multiple tasks at once and the physical impossibility of being in multiple places at once, available time and the relationship between movement in space and movement in time.

Location offers are a particular type of capability constraint. Examples include:

  • Locale
  • Regionalization: political or geographical zones, or rooms in a building
  • Presence: Do other actors participate in the action? (see co-presence); and more specifically
  • Physical presence: Are other actors physically nearby?

Agents are always able to engage in a dialectic of control, able to "intervene in the world or to refrain from such intervention, with the effect of influencing a specific process or state of affairs."[1]: 14  In essence, agents experience inherent and contrasting amounts of autonomy and dependence; agents can always either act or not.[2]

Methodology edit

Structuration theory is relevant to research, but does not prescribe a methodology and its use in research has been problematic. Giddens intended his theory to be abstract and theoretical, informing the hermeneutic aspects of research rather than guiding practice. Giddens wrote that structuration theory "establishes the internal logical coherence of concepts within a theoretical network."[2]: 34  Giddens criticized many researchers who used structuration theory for empirical research, critiquing their "en bloc" use of the theory's abstract concepts in a burdensome way. "The works applying concepts from the logical framework of structuration theory that Giddens approved of were those that used them more selectively, 'in a spare and critical fashion.'"[2]: 2  Giddens and followers used structuration theory more as "a sensitizing device".[10]

Structuration theory allows researchers to focus on any structure or concept individually or in combination. In this way, structuration theory prioritizes ontology over epistemology. In his own work, Giddens focuses on production and reproduction of social practices in some context. He looked for stasis and change, agent expectations, relative degrees of routine, tradition, behavior, and creative, skillful, and strategic thought simultaneously. He examined spatial organization, intended and unintended consequences, skilled and knowledgeable agents, discursive and tacit knowledge, dialectic of control, actions with motivational content, and constraints.[2] Structuration theorists conduct analytical research of social relations, rather than organically discovering them, since they use structuration theory to reveal specific research questions, though that technique has been criticized as cherry-picking.[2]

Giddens preferred strategic conduct analysis, which focuses on contextually situated actions. It employs detailed accounts of agents' knowledgeability, motivation, and the dialectic of control.[1]

Criticisms and additions edit

Though structuration theory has received critical expansion since its origination, Giddens' concepts remained pivotal for later extension of the theory, especially the duality of structure.[11]

Strong structuration edit

Rob Stones argued that many aspects of Giddens' original theory had little place in its modern manifestation. Stones focused on clarifying its scope, reconfiguring some concepts and inserting new ones, and refining methodology and research orientations. Strong structuration:

  1. Places its ontology more in situ than abstractly.
  2. Introduces the quadripartite cycle, which details the elements in the duality of structure. These are:
    • external structures as conditions of action;
    • internal structures within the agent;
    • active agency, "including a range of aspects involved when agents draw upon internal structures in producing practical action";[2]: 9  and
    • outcomes (as both structures and events).
  3. Increases attention to epistemology and methodology. Ontology supports epistemology and methodology by prioritising:
    • the question-at-hand;
    • appropriate forms of methodological bracketing;
    • distinct methodological steps in research; and
    • "[t]he specific combinations of all the above in composite forms of research."[2]: 189 
  4. Discovers the "meso-level of ontology between the abstract, philosophical level of ontology and the in-situ, ontic level."[2] Strong structuration allows varied abstract ontological concepts in experiential conditions.
  5. Focuses on the meso-level at the temporal and spatial scale.
  6. Conceptualises independent causal forces and irresistible causal forces, which take into account how external structures, internal structures, and active agency affect agent choices (or lack of them). "Irresistible forces" are the connected concepts of a horizon of action with a set of "actions-in-hand" and a hierarchical ordering of purposes and concerns. An agent is affected by external influences. This aspect of strong structuration helps reconcile an agent's dialectic of control and his/her more constrained set of "real choices."[2]

Post-structuration and dualism edit

Margaret Archer objected to the inseparability of structure and agency in structuration theory.[12] She proposed a notion of dualism rather than "duality of structure". She primarily examined structural frameworks and the action within the limits allowed by those conditions. She combined realist ontology and called her methodology analytical dualism. Archer maintained that structure precedes agency in social structure reproduction and analytical importance, and that they should be analysed separately. She emphasised the importance of temporality in social analysis, dividing it into four stages: structural conditioning, social interaction, its immediate outcome and structural elaboration. Thus her analysis considered embedded "structural conditions, emergent causal powers and properties, social interactions between agents, and subsequent structural changes or reproductions arising from the latter."[2] Archer criticised structuration theory for denying time and place because of the inseparability between structure and agency.[2]

Nicos Mouzelis reconstructed Giddens' original theories.[13] Mouzelis kept Giddens' original formulation of structure as "rules and resources." However, he was considered a dualist, because he argued for dualism to be as important in social analysis as the duality of structure.[14] Mouzelis reexamined human social action at the "syntagmatic" (syntactic) level. He claimed that the duality of structure does not account for all types of social relationships. Duality of structure works when agents do not question or disrupt rules, and interaction resembles "natural/performative" actions with a practical orientation. However, in other contexts, the relationship between structure and agency can resemble dualism more than duality, such as systems that are the result of powerful agents. In these situations, rules are not viewed as resources, but are in states of transition or redefinition, where actions are seen from a "strategic/monitoring orientation."[15]: 28  In this orientation, dualism shows the distance between agents and structures. He called these situations "syntagmatic duality". For example, a professor can change the class he or she teaches, but has little capability to change the larger university structure. "In that case, syntagmatic duality gives way to syntagmatic dualism."[15]: 28  This implies that systems are the outcome, but not the medium, of social actions. Mouzelis also criticised Giddens' lack of consideration for social hierarchies.

John Parker built on Archer and Mouzelis's support for dualism to propose a theoretical reclamation of historical sociology and macro-structures using concrete historical cases, claiming that dualism better explained the dynamics of social structures.[16] Equally, Robert Archer developed and applied analytical dualism in his critical analysis of the impact of New Managerialism on education policy in England and Wales during the 1990s[17] and organization theory.[18]

John B. Thompson edit

Though he agreed with the soundness and overall purposes of Giddens' most expansive structuration concepts (i.e., against dualism and for the study of structure in concert with agency), John B. Thompson ("a close friend and colleague of Giddens at Cambridge University")[2]: 46  wrote one of the most widely cited critiques of structuration theory.[19] His central argument was that it needed to be more specific and more consistent both internally and with conventional social structure theory. Thompson focused on problematic aspects of Giddens' concept of structure as "rules and resources," focusing on "rules". He argued that Giddens' concept of rule was too broad.

Thompson claimed that Giddens presupposed a criterion of importance in contending that rules are a generalizable enough tool to apply to every aspect of human action and interaction; "on the other hand, Giddens is well aware that some rules, or some kinds or aspects of rules, are much more important than others for the analysis of, for example, the social structure of capitalist societies."[19]: 159  He found the term to be imprecise and to not designate which rules are more relevant for which social structures.

Thompson used the example of linguistic analysis to point out that the need for a prior framework which to enable analysis of, for example, the social structure of an entire nation. While semantic rules may be relevant to social structure, to study them "presupposes some structural points of reference which are not themselves rules, with regard to which [of] these semantic rules are differentiated"[19]: 159  according to class, sex, region and so on. He called this structural differentiation.

Rules differently affect variously situated individuals. Thompson gave the example of a private school which restricts enrollment and thus participation. Thus rules—in this case, restrictions—"operate differentially, affecting unevenly various groups of individuals whose categorization depends on certain assumptions about social structures."[19]: 159  The isolated analysis of rules does not incorporate differences among agents.

Thompson claimed that Giddens offered no way of formulating structural identity. Some "rules" are better conceived of as broad inherent elements that define a structure's identity (e.g., Henry Ford and Harold Macmillan are "capitalistic"). These agents may differ, but have important traits in common due to their "capitalistic" identity. Thompson theorized that these traits were not rules in the sense that a manager could draw upon a "rule" to fire a tardy employee; rather, they were elements which "limit the kinds of rules which are possible and which thereby delimit the scope for institutional variation."[19]: 160  It is necessary to outline the broader social system to be able to analyze agents, actors, and rules within that system.

Thus Thompson concluded that Giddens' use of the term "rules" is problematic. "Structure" is similarly objectionable: "But to adhere to this conception of structure, while at the same time acknowledging the need for the study of 'structural principles,' 'structural sets' and 'axes of structuration,' is simply a recipe for conceptual confusion."[19]: 163 

Thompson proposed several amendments. He requested sharper differentiation between the reproduction of institutions and the reproduction of social structure. He proposed an altered version of the structuration cycle. He defined "institutions" as "characterized by rules, regulations and conventions of various sorts, by differing kinds and quantities of resources and by hierarchical power relations between the occupants of institutional positions."[19]: 165  Agents acting within institutions and conforming to institutional rules and regulations or using institutionally endowed power reproduce the institution. "If, in so doing, the institutions continue to satisfy certain structural conditions, both in the sense of conditions which delimit the scope for institutional variation and the conditions which underlie the operation of structural differentiation, then the agents may be said to reproduce social structure."[19]: 165 

Thompson also proposed adding a range of alternatives to Giddens' conception of constraints on human action. He pointed out the paradoxical relationship between Giddens' "dialectic of control" and his acknowledgement that constraints may leave an agent with no choice. He demanded that Giddens better show how wants and desires relate to choice.

Giddens replied that a structural principle is not equivalent with rules, and pointed to his definition from A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism: "Structural principles are principles of organisation implicated in those practices most "deeply" (in time) and "pervasively" (in space) sedimented in society",[20]: 54  and described structuration as a "mode of institutional articulation"[21]: 257  with emphasis on the relationship between time and space and a host of institutional orderings including, but not limited to, rules.

Ultimately, Thompson concluded that the concept of structure as "rules and resources" in an elemental and ontological way resulted in conceptual confusion. Many theorists supported Thompson's argument that an analysis "based on structuration's ontology of structures as norms, interpretative schemes and power resources radically limits itself if it does not frame and locate itself within a more broadly conceived notion of social structures."[2]: 51 [22]

Change edit

Sewell provided a useful summary that included one of the theory's less specified aspects: the question "Why are structural transformations possible?" He claimed that Giddens' overrelied on rules and modified Giddens' argument by re-defining "resources" as the embodiment of cultural schemas. He argued that change arises from the multiplicity of structures, the transposable nature of schemas, the unpredictability of resource accumulation, the polysemy of resources and the intersection of structures.[22]: 20 

The existence of multiple structures implies that the knowledgeable agents whose actions produce systems are capable of applying different schemas to contexts with differing resources, contrary to the conception of a universal habitus (learned dispositions, skills and ways of acting). He wrote that "Societies are based on practices that derived from many distinct structures, which exist at different levels, operate in different modalities, and are themselves based on widely varying types and quantities of resources. ...It is never true that all of them are homologous."[22]: 16 

Originally from Bourdieu, transposable schemas can be "applied to a wide and not fully predictable range of cases outside the context in which they were initially learned." That capacity "is inherent in the knowledge of cultural schemas that characterizes all minimally competent members of society."[22]: 17 

Agents may modify schemas even though their use does not predictably accumulate resources. For example, the effect of a joke is never quite certain, but a comedian may alter it based on the amount of laughter it garners regardless of this variability.

Agents may interpret a particular resource according to different schemas. E.g., a commander could attribute his wealth to military prowess, while others could see it as a blessing from the gods or a coincidental initial advantage.

Structures often overlap, confusing interpretation (e.g., the structure of capitalist society includes production from both private property and worker solidarity).

Technology edit

This theory was adapted and augmented by researchers interested in the relationship between technology and social structures, such as information technology in organizations. DeSanctis and Poole proposed an "adaptive structuration theory" with respect to the emergence and use of group decision support systems. In particular, they chose Giddens' notion of modalities to consider how technology is used with respect to its "spirit". "Appropriations" are the immediate, visible actions that reveal deeper structuration processes and are enacted with "moves". Appropriations may be faithful or unfaithful, be instrumental and be used with various attitudes.[23]

Wanda Orlikowski applied the duality of structure to technology: "The duality of technology identifies prior views of technology as either objective force or as socially constructed product–as a false dichotomy."[24]: 13  She compared this to previous models (the technological imperative, strategic choice, and technology as a trigger) and considered the importance of meaning, power, norms, and interpretive flexibility. Orlikowski later replaced the notion of embedded properties[23] for enactment (use). The "practice lens" shows how people enact structures which shape their use of technology that they employ in their practices.[25] While Orlikowski's work focused on corporations, it is equally applicable to the technology cultures that have emerged in smaller community-based organizations, and can be adapted through the gender sensitivity lens in approaches to technology governance.[26]

Workman, Ford and Allen rearticulated structuration theory as structuration agency theory for modeling socio-biologically inspired structuration in security software.[27] Software agents join humans to engage in social actions of information exchange, giving and receiving instructions, responding to other agents, and pursuing goals individually or jointly.

Four-flows-model edit

The four flows model of organizing is grounded in structuration theory. McPhee and Pamela Zaug (2001)[28] identify four communication flows that collectively perform key organizational functions and distinguish organizations from less formal social groups:

  • Membership negotiation—socialization, but also identification and self-positioning;
  • Organizational self-structuring—reflexive, especially managerial, structuring and control activities;
  • Activity coordination—Interacting to align or adjust local work activities;
  • Institutional positioning in the social order of institutions—mostly external communication to gain recognition and inclusion in the web of social transactions.

Group communication edit

Poole, Seibold, and McPhee wrote that "group structuration theory,"[29]: 3  provides "a theory of group interaction commensurate with the complexities of the phenomenon."[30]: 116 

The theory attempts to integrate macrosocial theories and individuals or small groups, as well as how to avoid the binary categorization of either "stable" or "emergent" groups.

Waldeck et al. concluded that the theory needs to better predict outcomes, rather than merely explaining them. Decision rules support decision-making, which produces a communication pattern that can be directly observable. Research has not yet examined the "rational" function of group communication and decision-making (i.e., how well it achieves goals), nor structural production or constraints. Researchers must empirically demonstrate the recursivity of action and structure, examine how structures stabilize and change over time due to group communication, and may want to integrate argumentation research.[29]

Public relations edit

Falkheimer claimed that integrating structuration theory into public relations (PR) strategies could result in a less agency-driven business, return theoretical focus to the role of power structures in PR, and reject massive PR campaigns in favor of a more "holistic understanding of how PR may be used in local contexts both as a reproductive and [transformational] social instrument."[31]: 103  Falkheimer portrayed PR as a method of communication and action whereby social systems emerge and reproduce. Structuration theory reinvigorates the study of space and time in PR theory. Applied structuration theory may emphasize community-based approaches, storytelling, rituals, and informal communication systems. Moreover, structuration theory integrates all organizational members in PR actions, integrating PR into all organizational levels rather than a separate office. Finally, structuration reveals interesting ethical considerations relating to whether a social system should transform.[31]

COVID-19 and structure edit

the COVID-19 pandemic had huge impact on society since the beginning.[citation needed] When investigating those impacts, many researchers found helpful using structuration theory to explain the change in society. Oliver (2021)[32] used "a theoretical framework derived from Giddens' structuration theory to analyze societal information cultures, concentrating on information and health literacy perspectives." And this framework focused on "the three modalities of structuration, i.e., interpretive schemes, resources, and norms." And in Oliver's research, those three modalities are "resources", "information freedom" and "formal and informal concepts and rules of behavior". After analyzing four countries framework, Oliver and his research team concluded "All our case studies show a number of competing information sources – from traditional media and official websites to various social media platforms used by both the government and the general public – that complicate the information landscape in which we all try to navigate what we know, and what we do not yet know, about the pandemic."

In the research of interpreting how remote work environment change during COVID-19 in South Africa, Walter (2020)[33] applied structuration theory because "it addresses the relationship between actors (or persons) and social structures and how these social structures ultimately realign and conform to the actions of actors" Plus, "these social structures from Giddens's structuration theory assist people to navigate through everyday life."

Zvokuomba (2021)[34] also used Giddens' theory of structuration "to reflect at the various levels of fragilities within the context of COVID-19 lockdown measures." One example in the research is that "theory of structuration and agency point to situations when individuals and groups of people either in compliance or defiance of community norms and rules of survival adopt certain practices." And during pandemic, researched pointed out "reverting to the traditional midwifery became a pragmatic approach to a problem." One example to support this point is that "As medical centers were partly closed, with no basic medication and health staff, the only alternative was seek traditional medical services. "

Business and structure edit

Structuration theory can also be used in explaining business related issues including operating, managing and marketing.

Clifton Scott and Karen Myers (2010[35])studied how the duality of structure can explain the shifts of members' actions during the membership negotiations in an organization by This is an example of how structure evolves with the interaction of a group of people.

Another case study done by Dutta (2016[36]) and his research team shows how the models shift because of the action of individuals. The article examines the relationship between CEO's behavior and a company's cross-border acquisition. This case can also demonstrate one of the major dimensions in the duality of structure, the sense of power from the CEO. Authors found out that the process follows the theory of duality of structure: under the circumstances of CEO is overconfident, and the company is the limitation of resources, the process of cross-border acquisition is likely to be different than before.

Yuan ElaineJ (2011[37])'s research focused on a certain demographic of people under the structure. Authors studied Chinese TV shows and audiences' flavor of the show. The author concludes in the relationship between the audience and the TV shows producers, audiences' behavior has higher-order patterns.

Pavlou and Majchrzak argued that research on business-to-business e-commerce portrayed technology as overly deterministic. The authors employed structuration theory to re-examine outcomes such as economic/business success as well as trust, coordination, innovation, and shared knowledge. They looked beyond technology into organizational structure and practices, and examined the effects on the structure of adapting to new technologies. The authors held that technology needs to be aligned and compatible with the existing "trustworthy"[38]: 179  practices and organizational and market structure. The authors recommended measuring long-term adaptations using ethnography, monitoring and other methods to observe causal relationships and generate better predictions.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Giddens, A. (1984). The constitution of society: Outline of the theory of structuration. Cambridge: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-520-05728-9.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Stones, R. (2005). Structuration theory. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.
  3. ^ a b Bryant, C.G.A., & Jary, D. (1991). Coming to terms with Anthony Giddens. In C.G.A. Bryant & D. Jary (Eds.), Giddens' theory of structuration: A critical appreciation (pp. 1-32). New York, NY: Routledge.
  4. ^ a b Giddens, A. (1993). New rules of sociological method: A positive critique of interpretative sociologies. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  5. ^ a b c Giddens, A. (1979). Central problems in social theory: Action, structure, and contradiction in social analysis. Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press.
  6. ^ McLennan, G. (1997/2000/2001). Critical or positive theory? A comment on the status of Anthony Giddens' social theory. In C.G.A. Bryant & D. Jary (Eds.), Anthony Giddens: Critical assessments (pp. 318-327). New York, NY: Routledge.
  7. ^ Zanin, Alaina C.; Piercy, Cameron W. (2018-07-19). "The Structuration of Community-Based Mental Health Care: A Duality Analysis of a Volunteer Group's Local Agency" (PDF). Qualitative Health Research. 29 (2): 184–197. doi:10.1177/1049732318786945. hdl:1808/27631. PMID 30024315. S2CID 51700414.
  8. ^ Giddens, A. (1991). Modernity and self-identity: Self and society in the late modern age. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  9. ^ Ilmonen, K. (2001). Sociology, consumption, and routine. In J. Gronow & A. Warde (Eds.), Ordinary Consumption (pp. 9-25). New York, NY: Routledge.
  10. ^ Turner, J.H. (1986). Review essay: The theory of structuration. American Journal of Sociology, 91(4), 969-977.
  11. ^ Elkafrawi, Nermin; Roos, Annie; Refai, Deema (2022-03-01). "Contextualising rural entrepreneurship – A strong structuration perspective on gendered-local agency". International Small Business Journal: Researching Entrepreneurship. 40 (8): 1019–1040. doi:10.1177/02662426211069851. ISSN 0266-2426.
  12. ^ Archer, M. (1995). Realist social theory: The morphogenetic approach. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  13. ^ Healy, K. (1998). "Conceptualising constraint: Mouzelis, Archer, and the concept of social structure." Sociology, 613(4), pp.613-635.
  14. ^ Mouzelis, N. (1989). "Restructuring structuration theory." The Sociological Review, 32(3), pp.509-522.
  15. ^ a b Mouzelis, N. (1991). Back to sociological theory: The construction of social orders. New York, NY: St. Martin's Press.
  16. ^ Parker, J. (2000). Structuration Buckingham: Open University Press.
  17. ^ Archer, Robert (2007-12-24). Education policy and realist social theory : primary teachers, child-centred philosophy and new managerialism. Routledge. ISBN 9780415464338.
  18. ^ Archer, Robert (2000). "The Place of Culture in Organization Theory: Introducing the Morphogenetic Approach". Organization. 7 (1): 95–128. doi:10.1177/135050840071006. S2CID 145352259.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Thompson, J.B. (1984). Studies in the theory of ideology. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  20. ^ Giddens, A. (1981). A contemporary critique of historical materialism: vol 1: Power, property, and the state. London: Macmillan.
  21. ^ Giddens, A. (1989). A reply to my critics. In D. Held & J. B. Thompson (Eds.), Social theory of modern societies: Anthony Giddens and his critics (pp.249-301). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  22. ^ a b c d Sewell, Jr., W. H. (1992). A theory of structure: duality, agency, and transformation. The American Journal of Sociology, 98(1):1-29.
  23. ^ a b Desanctis, G. & Poole, M. S. (1994). Capturing the complexity in advanced technology use: adaptive structuration theory. Organization Science, 5(2):121-147.
  24. ^ Orlikowski, W. J. (1992). The duality of technology: rethinking the concept of technology in organizations. Organization Science, 3(3):398-427. Earlier version at the URI http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/2300
  25. ^ Orlikowski, W. J. (2000). Using technology and constituting structures: a practice lens for studying technology in organizations. Organization Science, 11(4):404-428.
  26. ^ Stillman, L. (2006). (Ph.D Thesis). Understandings of Technology in Community-Based Organisations: A Structurational Analysis. Monash University, Australia. Retrieved from: http://webstylus.net/?q=node/182.
  27. ^ Workman, M., Ford, R., & Allen, W. (2008). A structuration agency approach to security policy enforcement in mobile ad hoc networks. Information Security Journal, 17, 267-277.
  28. ^ McPhee, Robert D.; Zaug, Pamela (2001-09-01). "Organizational Theory, Organizational Communication, Organizational Knowledge, and Problematic Integration". Journal of Communication. 51 (3): 574–591. doi:10.1111/j.1460-2466.2001.tb02897.x. ISSN 0021-9916.
  29. ^ a b Waldeck, J.H., Shepard, C.A., Teitelbaum, J., Farrar, W.J., & Seibold, D.R. (2002). New directions for functional, symbolic convergence, structuration, and bona fide group perspectives of group communication. In L.R. Frey (Ed.), New directions in group communication (pp.3-25). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.
  30. ^ Poole, M.S., Seibold, D.R., & McPhee, R.D. (1996). The structuration of group decisions. In R.Y. Hirokawa & M.S. Poole (Eds.), Communication and group decision making (pp.114-146). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
  31. ^ a b Falkheimer, J. (2009). On Giddens: Interpreting public relations through Anthony Giddens' structuration and late modernity theory. In O. Ihlen, B. van Ruler, & M. Frederiksson (Eds.), Public relations and social theory: Key figures and concepts (pp.103-119). New York, NY: Routledge.
  32. ^ Oliver, Gillian; Jeurgens, Charles; Lian, Zhiying; Haraldsdottir, Ragna Kemp; Foscarini, Fiorella; Wang, Ning (2021), Toeppe, Katharina; Yan, Hui; Chu, Samuel Kai Wah (eds.), "Societal Information Cultures: Insights from the COVID-19 Pandemic", Diversity, Divergence, Dialogue, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Cham: Springer International Publishing, vol. 12645, pp. 618–634, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-71292-1_48, ISBN 978-3-030-71291-4, S2CID 232294007, retrieved 2021-11-15
  33. ^ Matli, Walter (2020-12-02). "The changing work landscape as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic: insights from remote workers life situations in South Africa". International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy. 40 (9/10): 1237–1256. doi:10.1108/IJSSP-08-2020-0386. ISSN 0144-333X.
  34. ^ Kabonga, Itai; Zvokuomba, Kwashirai (2021-09-29). "Surviving on the margins: Volunteers' agency to survive poverty and vulnerability in Zimbabwe". International Social Work. 66 (4): 1135–1141. doi:10.1177/00208728211045423. ISSN 0020-8728. S2CID 244235701.
  35. ^ Scott, Clifton; Myers, Karen (February 2010). "Toward an Integrative Theoretical Perspective on Organizational Membership Negotiations: Socialization, Assimilation, and the Duality of Structure". Communication Theory. 20 (1): 79–105. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2885.2009.01355.x.
  36. ^ Dutta, Dev K.; Malhotra, Shavin; Zhu, PengCheng (February 2016). "Internationalization process, impact of slack resources, and role of the CEO: The duality of structure and agency in evolution of cross-border acquisition decisions". Journal of World Business. 51 (2): 212–225. doi:10.1016/j.jwb.2015.07.001.
  37. ^ Yuan, Elaine J.; Ksiazek, Thomas B. (2011-05-25). "The Duality of Structure in China's National Television Market: A Network Analysis of Audience Behavior". Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media. 55 (2): 180–197. doi:10.1080/08838151.2011.570825. ISSN 0883-8151. S2CID 55934782.
  38. ^ Pavlou, P.A>, & Majchrzak, A. (2002). Structuration theory: Capturing the complexity of business-to-business intermediaries. In M. Warkentin (Ed.), Business to business electronic commerce: Challenges & solutions (pp.175-189). Hershey, PA: Idea Group Publishing.

External links edit

  • Anthony Giddens'The constitution of society: An outline of the theory of structuration.. Giddens' most comprehensive work on structuration theory. Available in part for free online via Google Books
  • This book is intended to provide an accessible introduction to Giddens' work and also to situate structuration theory in the context of other approaches. Available in part for free online via Google Books.
  • A critical assessment of Giddens' entire body of work. Available in part for free online via Google Books.
  • Social theory for beginners. Available in part for free online via Google Books.
  • Anthony Giddens: The theory of structuration - Theory.org.uk.
  • A video on YouTube detailing the structure of structuration theory as contrasted with Talcott Parsons's action theory.

structuration, theory, theory, structuration, social, theory, creation, reproduction, social, systems, that, based, analysis, both, structure, agents, structure, agency, without, giving, primacy, either, furthermore, structuration, theory, neither, micro, macr. The theory of structuration is a social theory of the creation and reproduction of social systems that is based on the analysis of both structure and agents see structure and agency without giving primacy to either Furthermore in structuration theory neither micro nor macro focused analysis alone is sufficient The theory was proposed by sociologist Anthony Giddens most significantly in The Constitution of Society 1 which examines phenomenology hermeneutics and social practices at the inseparable intersection of structures and agents Its proponents have adopted and expanded this balanced position 2 Though the theory has received much criticism it remains a pillar of contemporary sociological theory 3 Contents 1 Premises and origins 2 Main ideas 2 1 Duality of structure 2 2 Cycle of structuration 2 2 1 Interaction 2 2 2 Routinization 2 2 3 Explanation 2 3 Structure and society 2 4 Agents and society 2 5 Methodology 3 Criticisms and additions 3 1 Strong structuration 3 2 Post structuration and dualism 3 3 John B Thompson 3 4 Change 3 5 Technology 3 6 Four flows model 3 7 Group communication 3 8 Public relations 3 9 COVID 19 and structure 3 10 Business and structure 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksPremises and origins editSociologist Anthony Giddens adopted a post empiricist frame for his theory as he was concerned with the abstract characteristics of social relations according to whom This leaves each level more accessible to analysis via the ontologies which constitute the human social experience space and time and thus in one sense history 1 3 His aim was to build a broad social theory which viewed t he basic domain of study of the social sciences as neither the experience of the individual actor nor the existence of any form of societal totality but social practices ordered across space and time 1 189 His focus on abstract ontology accompanied a general and purposeful neglect of epistemology or detailed research methodology Giddens used concepts from objectivist and subjectivist social theories discarding objectivism s focus on detached structures which lacked regard for humanist elements and subjectivism s exclusive attention to individual or group agency without consideration for socio structural context He critically engaged classical nineteenth and early twentieth century social theorists such as Auguste Comte Karl Marx Max Weber Emile Durkheim Alfred Schutz Robert K Merton Erving Goffman and Jurgen Habermas 2 Thus in many ways structuration was an exercise in clarification of logical issues 4 viii Structuration drew on other fields as well He also wanted to bring in from other disciplines novel aspects of ontology that he felt had been neglected by social theorists working in the domains that most interested him Thus for example he enlisted the aid of geographers historians and philosophers in bringing notions of time and space into the central heartlands of social theory 2 16 Giddens hoped that a subject wide coming together might occur which would involve greater cross disciplinary dialogue and cooperation especially between anthropologists social scientists and sociologists of all types historians geographers and even novelists Believing that literary style matters he held that social scientists are communicators who share frames of meaning across cultural contexts through their work by utilising the same sources of description mutual knowledge as novelists or others who write fictional accounts of social life 1 285 Structuration differs from its historical sources Unlike structuralism it sees the reproduction of social systems not as a mechanical outcome but rather as an active constituting process accomplished by and consisting in the doings of active subjects 4 121 Unlike Althusser s concept of agents as bearers of structures structuration theory sees them as active participants Unlike the philosophy of action and other forms of interpretative sociology structuration focuses on structure rather than production exclusively Unlike Saussure s production of an utterance structuration sees language as a tool from which to view society not as the constitution of society parting with structural linguists such as Claude Levi Strauss and generative grammar theorists such as Noam Chomsky Unlike post structuralist theory which put similar focus on the effects of time and space structuration does not recognise only movement change and transition Unlike functionalism in which structures and their virtual synonyms systems comprise organisations structuration sees structures and systems as separate concepts Unlike Marxism structuration avoids an overly restrictive concept of society and Marxism s reliance on a universal motor of history i e class conflict its theories of societal adaptation and its insistence on the working class as universal class and socialism as the ultimate form of modern society Finally structuration theory cannot be expected to furnish the moral guarantees that critical theorists sometimes purport to offer 3 16 Main ideas editDuality of structure edit Giddens observed that in social analysis the term structure referred generally to rules and resources and more specifically to the structuring properties allowing the binding of time space in social systems These properties make it possible for similar social practices to exist across time and space and that lend them systemic form 1 17 Agents groups or individuals draw upon these structures to perform social actions through embedded memory called memory traces Memory traces are thus the vehicle through which social actions are carried out Structure is also however the result of these social practices Thus Giddens conceives of the duality of structure as being the essential recursiveness of social life as constituted in social practices structure is both medium and outcome of reproduction of practices Structure enters simultaneously into the constitution of the agent and social practices and exists in the generating moments of this constitution 5 5 Giddens uses the duality of structure i e material ideational micro macro to emphasize structure s nature as both medium and outcome Structures exist both internally within agents as memory traces that are the product of phenomenological and hermeneutic inheritance 2 27 and externally as the manifestation of social actions Similarly social structures contain agents and or are the product of past actions of agents Giddens holds this duality alongside structure and system in addition to the concept of recursiveness as the core of structuration theory 1 17 His theory has been adopted by those with structuralist inclinations but who wish to situate such structures in human practice rather than to reify them as an ideal type or material property This is different for example from actor network theory which appears to grant a certain autonomy to technical artifacts Social systems have patterns of social relation that change over time the changing nature of space and time determines the interaction of social relations and therefore structure Hitherto social structures or models were either taken to be beyond the realm of human control the positivistic approach or posit that action creates them the interpretivist approach The duality of structure emphasizes that they are different sides to the same central question of how social order is created Gregor McLennan suggested renaming this process the duality of structure and agency since both aspects are involved in using and producing social actions 6 322 Cycle of structuration edit The duality of structure is essentially a feedback feedforward clarification needed process whereby agents and structures mutually enact social systems and social systems in turn become part of that duality citation needed Structuration thus recognizes a social cycle In examining social systems structuration theory examines structure modality and interaction The modality discussed below of a structural system is the means by which structures are translated into actions Interaction edit Interaction is the agent s activity within the social system space and time It can be understood as the fitful yet routinized occurrence of encounters fading away in time and space yet constantly reconstituted within different areas of time space 1 86 Rules can affect interaction as originally suggested by Goffman Frames are clusters of rules which help to constitute and regulate activities defining them as activities of a certain sort and as subject to a given range of sanctions 1 87 Frames are necessary for agents to feel ontological security the trust that everyday actions have some degree of predictability Whenever individuals interact in a specific context they address without any difficulty and in many cases without conscious acknowledgement the question What is going on here Framing is the practice by which agents make sense of what they are doing 1 Routinization edit Structuration theory is centrally concerned with order as the transcending of time and space in human social relationships 1 Institutionalized action and routinization are foundational in the establishment of social order and the reproduction of social systems Routine persists in society even during social and political revolutions where daily life is greatly deformed as Bettelheim demonstrates so well routines including those of an obnoxious sort are re established 1 87 Routine interactions become institutionalized features of social systems via tradition custom and or habit but this is no easy societal task and it is a major error to suppose that these phenomena need no explanation On the contrary as Goffman together with ethnomethodology has helped to demonstrate the routinized character of most social activity is something that has to be worked at continually by those who sustain it in their day to day conduct 1 Therefore routinized social practices do not stem from coincidence but the skilled accomplishments of knowledgeable agents 2 26 Trust and tact are essential for the existence of a basic security system the sustaining in praxis of a sense of ontological security and thus the routine nature of social reproduction which agents skilfully organize The monitoring of the body the control and use of face in face work these are fundamental to social integration in time and space 1 86 Explanation edit When I utter a sentence I draw upon various syntactical rules sedimented in my practical consciousness of the language in order to do so These structural features of the language are the medium whereby I generate the utterance But in producing a syntactically correct utterance I simultaneously contribute to the reproduction of the language as a whole The relation between moment and totality for social theory involves a dialectic of presence and absence which ties the most minor or trivial forms of social action to structural properties of the overall society and to the coalescence of institutions over long stretches of historical time 1 24 Thus even the smallest social actions contribute to the alteration or reproduction of social systems Social stability and order is not permanent agents always possess a dialectic of control discussed below which allows them to break away from normative actions Depending on the social factors present agents may cause shifts in social structure The cycle of structuration is not a defined sequence it is rarely a direct succession of causal events Structures and agents are both internal and external to each other mingling interrupting and continually changing each other as feedbacks and feedforwards occur Giddens stated The degree of systemness is very variable I take it to be one of the main features of structuration theory that the extension and closure of societies across space and time is regarded as problematic 1 165 The use of patriot in political speech reflects this mingling borrowing from and contributing to nationalistic norms and supports structures such as a police state from which it in turn gains impact Structure and society edit Structures are the rules and resources embedded in agents memory traces Agents call upon their memory traces of which they are knowledgeable to perform social actions Knowledgeability refers to what agents know about what they do and why they do it 1 Giddens divides memory traces structures within knowledgeability 2 into three types Domination power Giddens also uses resources to refer to this type Authoritative resources allow agents to control persons whereas allocative resources allow agents to control material objects Signification meaning Giddens suggests that meaning is inferred through structures Agents use existing experience to infer meaning For example the meaning of living with mental illness comes from contextualized experiences 7 Legitimation norms Giddens sometimes uses rules to refer to either signification or legitimation An agent draws upon these stocks of knowledge via memory to inform him or herself about the external context conditions and potential results of an action When an agent uses these structures for social interactions they are called modalities and present themselves in the forms of facility domination interpretive scheme communication signification and norms sanctions legitimation Thus he distinguishes between overall structures within knowledgeability and the more limited and task specific modalities on which these agents subsequently draw when they interact The duality of structures means that structures enter simultaneously into the constitution of the agent and social practices and exists in the generating moments of this constitution 5 5 Structures exist paradigmatically as an absent set of differences temporally present only in their instantiation in the constituting moments of social systems 5 64 Giddens draws upon structuralism and post structuralism in theorizing that structures and their meaning are understood by their differences Agents and society edit Giddens agents follow previous psychoanalysis work done by Sigmund Freud and others 1 Agency as Giddens calls it is human action To be human is to be an agent not all agents are human Agency is critical to both the reproduction and the transformation of society Another way to explain this concept is by what Giddens calls the reflexive monitoring of actions 8 Reflexive monitoring refers to agents ability to monitor their actions and those actions settings and contexts Monitoring is an essential characteristic of agency Agents subsequently rationalize or evaluate the success of those efforts All humans engage in this process and expect the same from others Through action agents produce structures through reflexive monitoring and rationalization they transform them To act agents must be motivated must be knowledgeable must be able to rationalize the action and must reflexively monitor the action Agents while bounded in structure draw upon their knowledge of that structural context when they act However actions are constrained by agents inherent capabilities and their understandings of available actions and external limitations Practical consciousness and discursive consciousness inform these abilities Practical consciousness is the knowledgeability that an agent brings to the tasks required by everyday life which is so integrated as to be hardly noticed Reflexive monitoring occurs at the level of practical consciousness 9 Discursive consciousness is the ability to verbally express knowledge Alongside practical and discursive consciousness Giddens recognizes actors as having reflexive contextual knowledge and that habitual widespread use of knowledgeability makes structures become institutionalized 1 Agents rationalize and in doing so link the agent and the agent s knowledgeability Agents must coordinate ongoing projects goals and contexts while performing actions This coordination is called reflexive monitoring and is connected to ethnomethodology s emphasis on agents intrinsic sense of accountability 1 The factors that can enable or constrain an agent as well as how an agent uses structures are known as capability constraints include age cognitive physical limits on performing multiple tasks at once and the physical impossibility of being in multiple places at once available time and the relationship between movement in space and movement in time Location offers are a particular type of capability constraint Examples include Locale Regionalization political or geographical zones or rooms in a building Presence Do other actors participate in the action see co presence and more specifically Physical presence Are other actors physically nearby Agents are always able to engage in a dialectic of control able to intervene in the world or to refrain from such intervention with the effect of influencing a specific process or state of affairs 1 14 In essence agents experience inherent and contrasting amounts of autonomy and dependence agents can always either act or not 2 Methodology edit Structuration theory is relevant to research but does not prescribe a methodology and its use in research has been problematic Giddens intended his theory to be abstract and theoretical informing the hermeneutic aspects of research rather than guiding practice Giddens wrote that structuration theory establishes the internal logical coherence of concepts within a theoretical network 2 34 Giddens criticized many researchers who used structuration theory for empirical research critiquing their en bloc use of the theory s abstract concepts in a burdensome way The works applying concepts from the logical framework of structuration theory that Giddens approved of were those that used them more selectively in a spare and critical fashion 2 2 Giddens and followers used structuration theory more as a sensitizing device 10 Structuration theory allows researchers to focus on any structure or concept individually or in combination In this way structuration theory prioritizes ontology over epistemology In his own work Giddens focuses on production and reproduction of social practices in some context He looked for stasis and change agent expectations relative degrees of routine tradition behavior and creative skillful and strategic thought simultaneously He examined spatial organization intended and unintended consequences skilled and knowledgeable agents discursive and tacit knowledge dialectic of control actions with motivational content and constraints 2 Structuration theorists conduct analytical research of social relations rather than organically discovering them since they use structuration theory to reveal specific research questions though that technique has been criticized as cherry picking 2 Giddens preferred strategic conduct analysis which focuses on contextually situated actions It employs detailed accounts of agents knowledgeability motivation and the dialectic of control 1 Criticisms and additions editThough structuration theory has received critical expansion since its origination Giddens concepts remained pivotal for later extension of the theory especially the duality of structure 11 Strong structuration edit Rob Stones argued that many aspects of Giddens original theory had little place in its modern manifestation Stones focused on clarifying its scope reconfiguring some concepts and inserting new ones and refining methodology and research orientations Strong structuration Places its ontology more in situ than abstractly Introduces the quadripartite cycle which details the elements in the duality of structure These are external structures as conditions of action internal structures within the agent active agency including a range of aspects involved when agents draw upon internal structures in producing practical action 2 9 and outcomes as both structures and events Increases attention to epistemology and methodology Ontology supports epistemology and methodology by prioritising the question at hand appropriate forms of methodological bracketing distinct methodological steps in research and t he specific combinations of all the above in composite forms of research 2 189 Discovers the meso level of ontology between the abstract philosophical level of ontology and the in situ ontic level 2 Strong structuration allows varied abstract ontological concepts in experiential conditions Focuses on the meso level at the temporal and spatial scale Conceptualises independent causal forces and irresistible causal forces which take into account how external structures internal structures and active agency affect agent choices or lack of them Irresistible forces are the connected concepts of a horizon of action with a set of actions in hand and a hierarchical ordering of purposes and concerns An agent is affected by external influences This aspect of strong structuration helps reconcile an agent s dialectic of control and his her more constrained set of real choices 2 Post structuration and dualism edit Margaret Archer objected to the inseparability of structure and agency in structuration theory 12 She proposed a notion of dualism rather than duality of structure She primarily examined structural frameworks and the action within the limits allowed by those conditions She combined realist ontology and called her methodology analytical dualism Archer maintained that structure precedes agency in social structure reproduction and analytical importance and that they should be analysed separately She emphasised the importance of temporality in social analysis dividing it into four stages structural conditioning social interaction its immediate outcome and structural elaboration Thus her analysis considered embedded structural conditions emergent causal powers and properties social interactions between agents and subsequent structural changes or reproductions arising from the latter 2 Archer criticised structuration theory for denying time and place because of the inseparability between structure and agency 2 Nicos Mouzelis reconstructed Giddens original theories 13 Mouzelis kept Giddens original formulation of structure as rules and resources However he was considered a dualist because he argued for dualism to be as important in social analysis as the duality of structure 14 Mouzelis reexamined human social action at the syntagmatic syntactic level He claimed that the duality of structure does not account for all types of social relationships Duality of structure works when agents do not question or disrupt rules and interaction resembles natural performative actions with a practical orientation However in other contexts the relationship between structure and agency can resemble dualism more than duality such as systems that are the result of powerful agents In these situations rules are not viewed as resources but are in states of transition or redefinition where actions are seen from a strategic monitoring orientation 15 28 In this orientation dualism shows the distance between agents and structures He called these situations syntagmatic duality For example a professor can change the class he or she teaches but has little capability to change the larger university structure In that case syntagmatic duality gives way to syntagmatic dualism 15 28 This implies that systems are the outcome but not the medium of social actions Mouzelis also criticised Giddens lack of consideration for social hierarchies John Parker built on Archer and Mouzelis s support for dualism to propose a theoretical reclamation of historical sociology and macro structures using concrete historical cases claiming that dualism better explained the dynamics of social structures 16 Equally Robert Archer developed and applied analytical dualism in his critical analysis of the impact of New Managerialism on education policy in England and Wales during the 1990s 17 and organization theory 18 John B Thompson edit Main article John Thompson sociologist Though he agreed with the soundness and overall purposes of Giddens most expansive structuration concepts i e against dualism and for the study of structure in concert with agency John B Thompson a close friend and colleague of Giddens at Cambridge University 2 46 wrote one of the most widely cited critiques of structuration theory 19 His central argument was that it needed to be more specific and more consistent both internally and with conventional social structure theory Thompson focused on problematic aspects of Giddens concept of structure as rules and resources focusing on rules He argued that Giddens concept of rule was too broad Thompson claimed that Giddens presupposed a criterion of importance in contending that rules are a generalizable enough tool to apply to every aspect of human action and interaction on the other hand Giddens is well aware that some rules or some kinds or aspects of rules are much more important than others for the analysis of for example the social structure of capitalist societies 19 159 He found the term to be imprecise and to not designate which rules are more relevant for which social structures Thompson used the example of linguistic analysis to point out that the need for a prior framework which to enable analysis of for example the social structure of an entire nation While semantic rules may be relevant to social structure to study them presupposes some structural points of reference which are not themselves rules with regard to which of these semantic rules are differentiated 19 159 according to class sex region and so on He called this structural differentiation Rules differently affect variously situated individuals Thompson gave the example of a private school which restricts enrollment and thus participation Thus rules in this case restrictions operate differentially affecting unevenly various groups of individuals whose categorization depends on certain assumptions about social structures 19 159 The isolated analysis of rules does not incorporate differences among agents Thompson claimed that Giddens offered no way of formulating structural identity Some rules are better conceived of as broad inherent elements that define a structure s identity e g Henry Ford and Harold Macmillan are capitalistic These agents may differ but have important traits in common due to their capitalistic identity Thompson theorized that these traits were not rules in the sense that a manager could draw upon a rule to fire a tardy employee rather they were elements which limit the kinds of rules which are possible and which thereby delimit the scope for institutional variation 19 160 It is necessary to outline the broader social system to be able to analyze agents actors and rules within that system Thus Thompson concluded that Giddens use of the term rules is problematic Structure is similarly objectionable But to adhere to this conception of structure while at the same time acknowledging the need for the study of structural principles structural sets and axes of structuration is simply a recipe for conceptual confusion 19 163 Thompson proposed several amendments He requested sharper differentiation between the reproduction of institutions and the reproduction of social structure He proposed an altered version of the structuration cycle He defined institutions as characterized by rules regulations and conventions of various sorts by differing kinds and quantities of resources and by hierarchical power relations between the occupants of institutional positions 19 165 Agents acting within institutions and conforming to institutional rules and regulations or using institutionally endowed power reproduce the institution If in so doing the institutions continue to satisfy certain structural conditions both in the sense of conditions which delimit the scope for institutional variation and the conditions which underlie the operation of structural differentiation then the agents may be said to reproduce social structure 19 165 Thompson also proposed adding a range of alternatives to Giddens conception of constraints on human action He pointed out the paradoxical relationship between Giddens dialectic of control and his acknowledgement that constraints may leave an agent with no choice He demanded that Giddens better show how wants and desires relate to choice Giddens replied that a structural principle is not equivalent with rules and pointed to his definition from A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism Structural principles are principles of organisation implicated in those practices most deeply in time and pervasively in space sedimented in society 20 54 and described structuration as a mode of institutional articulation 21 257 with emphasis on the relationship between time and space and a host of institutional orderings including but not limited to rules Ultimately Thompson concluded that the concept of structure as rules and resources in an elemental and ontological way resulted in conceptual confusion Many theorists supported Thompson s argument that an analysis based on structuration s ontology of structures as norms interpretative schemes and power resources radically limits itself if it does not frame and locate itself within a more broadly conceived notion of social structures 2 51 22 Change edit Sewell provided a useful summary that included one of the theory s less specified aspects the question Why are structural transformations possible He claimed that Giddens overrelied on rules and modified Giddens argument by re defining resources as the embodiment of cultural schemas He argued that change arises from the multiplicity of structures the transposable nature of schemas the unpredictability of resource accumulation the polysemy of resources and the intersection of structures 22 20 The existence of multiple structures implies that the knowledgeable agents whose actions produce systems are capable of applying different schemas to contexts with differing resources contrary to the conception of a universal habitus learned dispositions skills and ways of acting He wrote that Societies are based on practices that derived from many distinct structures which exist at different levels operate in different modalities and are themselves based on widely varying types and quantities of resources It is never true that all of them are homologous 22 16 Originally from Bourdieu transposable schemas can be applied to a wide and not fully predictable range of cases outside the context in which they were initially learned That capacity is inherent in the knowledge of cultural schemas that characterizes all minimally competent members of society 22 17 Agents may modify schemas even though their use does not predictably accumulate resources For example the effect of a joke is never quite certain but a comedian may alter it based on the amount of laughter it garners regardless of this variability Agents may interpret a particular resource according to different schemas E g a commander could attribute his wealth to military prowess while others could see it as a blessing from the gods or a coincidental initial advantage Structures often overlap confusing interpretation e g the structure of capitalist society includes production from both private property and worker solidarity Technology edit See also Theories of technology This theory was adapted and augmented by researchers interested in the relationship between technology and social structures such as information technology in organizations DeSanctis and Poole proposed an adaptive structuration theory with respect to the emergence and use of group decision support systems In particular they chose Giddens notion of modalities to consider how technology is used with respect to its spirit Appropriations are the immediate visible actions that reveal deeper structuration processes and are enacted with moves Appropriations may be faithful or unfaithful be instrumental and be used with various attitudes 23 Wanda Orlikowski applied the duality of structure to technology The duality of technology identifies prior views of technology as either objective force or as socially constructed product as a false dichotomy 24 13 She compared this to previous models the technological imperative strategic choice and technology as a trigger and considered the importance of meaning power norms and interpretive flexibility Orlikowski later replaced the notion of embedded properties 23 for enactment use The practice lens shows how people enact structures which shape their use of technology that they employ in their practices 25 While Orlikowski s work focused on corporations it is equally applicable to the technology cultures that have emerged in smaller community based organizations and can be adapted through the gender sensitivity lens in approaches to technology governance 26 Workman Ford and Allen rearticulated structuration theory as structuration agency theory for modeling socio biologically inspired structuration in security software 27 Software agents join humans to engage in social actions of information exchange giving and receiving instructions responding to other agents and pursuing goals individually or jointly Four flows model edit The four flows model of organizing is grounded in structuration theory McPhee and Pamela Zaug 2001 28 identify four communication flows that collectively perform key organizational functions and distinguish organizations from less formal social groups Membership negotiation socialization but also identification and self positioning Organizational self structuring reflexive especially managerial structuring and control activities Activity coordination Interacting to align or adjust local work activities Institutional positioning in the social order of institutions mostly external communication to gain recognition and inclusion in the web of social transactions Group communication edit Poole Seibold and McPhee wrote that group structuration theory 29 3 provides a theory of group interaction commensurate with the complexities of the phenomenon 30 116 The theory attempts to integrate macrosocial theories and individuals or small groups as well as how to avoid the binary categorization of either stable or emergent groups Waldeck et al concluded that the theory needs to better predict outcomes rather than merely explaining them Decision rules support decision making which produces a communication pattern that can be directly observable Research has not yet examined the rational function of group communication and decision making i e how well it achieves goals nor structural production or constraints Researchers must empirically demonstrate the recursivity of action and structure examine how structures stabilize and change over time due to group communication and may want to integrate argumentation research 29 Public relations edit Falkheimer claimed that integrating structuration theory into public relations PR strategies could result in a less agency driven business return theoretical focus to the role of power structures in PR and reject massive PR campaigns in favor of a more holistic understanding of how PR may be used in local contexts both as a reproductive and transformational social instrument 31 103 Falkheimer portrayed PR as a method of communication and action whereby social systems emerge and reproduce Structuration theory reinvigorates the study of space and time in PR theory Applied structuration theory may emphasize community based approaches storytelling rituals and informal communication systems Moreover structuration theory integrates all organizational members in PR actions integrating PR into all organizational levels rather than a separate office Finally structuration reveals interesting ethical considerations relating to whether a social system should transform 31 COVID 19 and structure edit the COVID 19 pandemic had huge impact on society since the beginning citation needed When investigating those impacts many researchers found helpful using structuration theory to explain the change in society Oliver 2021 32 used a theoretical framework derived from Giddens structuration theory to analyze societal information cultures concentrating on information and health literacy perspectives And this framework focused on the three modalities of structuration i e interpretive schemes resources and norms And in Oliver s research those three modalities are resources information freedom and formal and informal concepts and rules of behavior After analyzing four countries framework Oliver and his research team concluded All our case studies show a number of competing information sources from traditional media and official websites to various social media platforms used by both the government and the general public that complicate the information landscape in which we all try to navigate what we know and what we do not yet know about the pandemic In the research of interpreting how remote work environment change during COVID 19 in South Africa Walter 2020 33 applied structuration theory because it addresses the relationship between actors or persons and social structures and how these social structures ultimately realign and conform to the actions of actors Plus these social structures from Giddens s structuration theory assist people to navigate through everyday life Zvokuomba 2021 34 also used Giddens theory of structuration to reflect at the various levels of fragilities within the context of COVID 19 lockdown measures One example in the research is that theory of structuration and agency point to situations when individuals and groups of people either in compliance or defiance of community norms and rules of survival adopt certain practices And during pandemic researched pointed out reverting to the traditional midwifery became a pragmatic approach to a problem One example to support this point is that As medical centers were partly closed with no basic medication and health staff the only alternative was seek traditional medical services Business and structure edit Structuration theory can also be used in explaining business related issues including operating managing and marketing Clifton Scott and Karen Myers 2010 35 studied how the duality of structure can explain the shifts of members actions during the membership negotiations in an organization by This is an example of how structure evolves with the interaction of a group of people Another case study done by Dutta 2016 36 and his research team shows how the models shift because of the action of individuals The article examines the relationship between CEO s behavior and a company s cross border acquisition This case can also demonstrate one of the major dimensions in the duality of structure the sense of power from the CEO Authors found out that the process follows the theory of duality of structure under the circumstances of CEO is overconfident and the company is the limitation of resources the process of cross border acquisition is likely to be different than before Yuan ElaineJ 2011 37 s research focused on a certain demographic of people under the structure Authors studied Chinese TV shows and audiences flavor of the show The author concludes in the relationship between the audience and the TV shows producers audiences behavior has higher order patterns Pavlou and Majchrzak argued that research on business to business e commerce portrayed technology as overly deterministic The authors employed structuration theory to re examine outcomes such as economic business success as well as trust coordination innovation and shared knowledge They looked beyond technology into organizational structure and practices and examined the effects on the structure of adapting to new technologies The authors held that technology needs to be aligned and compatible with the existing trustworthy 38 179 practices and organizational and market structure The authors recommended measuring long term adaptations using ethnography monitoring and other methods to observe causal relationships and generate better predictions See also edit nbsp Society portalAction theory sociology Archaeology of religion and ritual A Community of Witches Wicca as a religion of late modernity Comparative contextual analysis Constitutive criminology Grand theory Health geography Macrosociology Social change Sociology of space Text and conversation theoryReferences edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Giddens A 1984 The constitution of society Outline of the theory of structuration Cambridge Polity Press ISBN 978 0 520 05728 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Stones R 2005 Structuration theory New York NY Palgrave Macmillan a b Bryant C G A amp Jary D 1991 Coming to terms with Anthony Giddens In C G A Bryant amp D Jary Eds Giddens theory of structuration A critical appreciation pp 1 32 New York NY Routledge a b Giddens A 1993 New rules of sociological method A positive critique of interpretative sociologies Stanford CA Stanford University Press a b c Giddens A 1979 Central problems in social theory Action structure and contradiction in social analysis Los Angeles CA University of California Press McLennan G 1997 2000 2001 Critical or positive theory A comment on the status of Anthony Giddens social theory In C G A Bryant amp D Jary Eds Anthony Giddens Critical assessments pp 318 327 New York NY Routledge Zanin Alaina C Piercy Cameron W 2018 07 19 The Structuration of Community Based Mental Health Care A Duality Analysis of a Volunteer Group s Local Agency PDF Qualitative Health Research 29 2 184 197 doi 10 1177 1049732318786945 hdl 1808 27631 PMID 30024315 S2CID 51700414 Giddens A 1991 Modernity and self identity Self and society in the late modern age Cambridge Polity Press Ilmonen K 2001 Sociology consumption and routine In J Gronow amp A Warde Eds Ordinary Consumption pp 9 25 New York NY Routledge Turner J H 1986 Review essay The theory of structuration American Journal of Sociology 91 4 969 977 Elkafrawi Nermin Roos Annie Refai Deema 2022 03 01 Contextualising rural entrepreneurship A strong structuration perspective on gendered local agency International Small Business Journal Researching Entrepreneurship 40 8 1019 1040 doi 10 1177 02662426211069851 ISSN 0266 2426 Archer M 1995 Realist social theory The morphogenetic approach Cambridge Cambridge University Press Healy K 1998 Conceptualising constraint Mouzelis Archer and the concept of social structure Sociology 613 4 pp 613 635 Mouzelis N 1989 Restructuring structuration theory The Sociological Review 32 3 pp 509 522 a b Mouzelis N 1991 Back to sociological theory The construction of social orders New York NY St Martin s Press Parker J 2000 Structuration Buckingham Open University Press Archer Robert 2007 12 24 Education policy and realist social theory primary teachers child centred philosophy and new managerialism Routledge ISBN 9780415464338 Archer Robert 2000 The Place of Culture in Organization Theory Introducing the Morphogenetic Approach Organization 7 1 95 128 doi 10 1177 135050840071006 S2CID 145352259 a b c d e f g h Thompson J B 1984 Studies in the theory of ideology Cambridge Polity Press Giddens A 1981 A contemporary critique of historical materialism vol 1 Power property and the state London Macmillan Giddens A 1989 A reply to my critics In D Held amp J B Thompson Eds Social theory of modern societies Anthony Giddens and his critics pp 249 301 Cambridge Cambridge University Press a b c d Sewell Jr W H 1992 A theory of structure duality agency and transformation The American Journal of Sociology 98 1 1 29 a b Desanctis G amp Poole M S 1994 Capturing the complexity in advanced technology use adaptive structuration theory Organization Science 5 2 121 147 Orlikowski W J 1992 The duality of technology rethinking the concept of technology in organizations Organization Science 3 3 398 427 Earlier version at the URI http hdl handle net 1721 1 2300 Orlikowski W J 2000 Using technology and constituting structures a practice lens for studying technology in organizations Organization Science 11 4 404 428 Stillman L 2006 Ph D Thesis Understandings of Technology in Community Based Organisations A Structurational Analysis Monash University Australia Retrieved from http webstylus net q node 182 Workman M Ford R amp Allen W 2008 A structuration agency approach to security policy enforcement in mobile ad hoc networks Information Security Journal 17 267 277 McPhee Robert D Zaug Pamela 2001 09 01 Organizational Theory Organizational Communication Organizational Knowledge and Problematic Integration Journal of Communication 51 3 574 591 doi 10 1111 j 1460 2466 2001 tb02897 x ISSN 0021 9916 a b Waldeck J H Shepard C A Teitelbaum J Farrar W J amp Seibold D R 2002 New directions for functional symbolic convergence structuration and bona fide group perspectives of group communication In L R Frey Ed New directions in group communication pp 3 25 Thousand Oaks CA Sage Publications Inc Poole M S Seibold D R amp McPhee R D 1996 The structuration of group decisions In R Y Hirokawa amp M S Poole Eds Communication and group decision making pp 114 146 Thousand Oaks CA Sage a b Falkheimer J 2009 On Giddens Interpreting public relations through Anthony Giddens structuration and late modernity theory In O Ihlen B van Ruler amp M Frederiksson Eds Public relations and social theory Key figures and concepts pp 103 119 New York NY Routledge Oliver Gillian Jeurgens Charles Lian Zhiying Haraldsdottir Ragna Kemp Foscarini Fiorella Wang Ning 2021 Toeppe Katharina Yan Hui Chu Samuel Kai Wah eds Societal Information Cultures Insights from the COVID 19 Pandemic Diversity Divergence Dialogue Lecture Notes in Computer Science Cham Springer International Publishing vol 12645 pp 618 634 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 71292 1 48 ISBN 978 3 030 71291 4 S2CID 232294007 retrieved 2021 11 15 Matli Walter 2020 12 02 The changing work landscape as a result of the Covid 19 pandemic insights from remote workers life situations in South Africa International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 40 9 10 1237 1256 doi 10 1108 IJSSP 08 2020 0386 ISSN 0144 333X Kabonga Itai Zvokuomba Kwashirai 2021 09 29 Surviving on the margins Volunteers agency to survive poverty and vulnerability in Zimbabwe International Social Work 66 4 1135 1141 doi 10 1177 00208728211045423 ISSN 0020 8728 S2CID 244235701 Scott Clifton Myers Karen February 2010 Toward an Integrative Theoretical Perspective on Organizational Membership Negotiations Socialization Assimilation and the Duality of Structure Communication Theory 20 1 79 105 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2885 2009 01355 x Dutta Dev K Malhotra Shavin Zhu PengCheng February 2016 Internationalization process impact of slack resources and role of the CEO The duality of structure and agency in evolution of cross border acquisition decisions Journal of World Business 51 2 212 225 doi 10 1016 j jwb 2015 07 001 Yuan Elaine J Ksiazek Thomas B 2011 05 25 The Duality of Structure in China s National Television Market A Network Analysis of Audience Behavior Journal of Broadcasting amp Electronic Media 55 2 180 197 doi 10 1080 08838151 2011 570825 ISSN 0883 8151 S2CID 55934782 Pavlou P A gt amp Majchrzak A 2002 Structuration theory Capturing the complexity of business to business intermediaries In M Warkentin Ed Business to business electronic commerce Challenges amp solutions pp 175 189 Hershey PA Idea Group Publishing External links editAnthony Giddens The constitution of society An outline of the theory of structuration Giddens most comprehensive work on structuration theory Available in part for free online via Google Books This book is intended to provide an accessible introduction to Giddens work and also to situate structuration theory in the context of other approaches Available in part for free online via Google Books A critical assessment of Giddens entire body of work Available in part for free online via Google Books Social theory for beginners Available in part for free online via Google Books Anthony Giddens The theory of structuration Theory org uk A video on YouTube detailing the structure of structuration theory as contrasted with Talcott Parsons s action theory Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Structuration theory amp oldid 1174853953, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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