Committing Sociology?
On the 15th April 2013 two homemade explosive devices detonated during the
annual Boston Marathon, killing three people and injuring over 250 others. In the wake of this horrific incident,
politicians all over the world began sending their condolences to the people of Boston
and offering their thoughts on the events surrounding the attack. The Canadian Liberal leader, Justin Trudeau, expressed the need to
look at the ‘root causes’ of the bombing – to seek to understand why individuals would actively plot and carry out an act which was
destined to kill and injury so many. In response, his political opponent, and Canadian Prime Minster at the time, Stephen Harper, responded
to Trudeau’s comments by stating that now was not the time to ‘commit sociology’.
Prime Minster Harper suggested that “these things are serious threats – global terrorist attacks, people who have agendas of violence
that are deep and abiding threats to all the values that our society stands for”. The Prime Minister continued, “I don’t think we want
to convey any view to the Canadian public other than our utter condemnation of this violence”. In other words, bad people do bad things,
full stop. And to attempt to understand why, is tantamount to justifying their actions. But is it enough to just assume that bad people
do bad things? This position does not help us understand global terrorism, nor the complexities of world politics and conflict. But
Sociology does.
The American Sociologist C. Wight-Mills described Sociology as a ‘craft’. It is a tool that allows us to see that our private troubles,
most often, have a wider cause and consequence. For Mills, Sociology is therefore a promise – a promise to help us better understand
the world we live in and how it works. Sociology helps us understand why people support the football teams that they do, why so many
of us use Facebook, why women on average get paid less than men doing the same jobs, or what terrorism is, and why it occurs. Sociology
is a subject that seeks to tackle and provide explanations for why people do what they do, and how we can see discernable patterns
and trends in human behaviour. Hence, Sociology is a both an interesting and extremely useful subject.
Under the 'More Resources' menu, you will find a number of pages which explore this fascinating subject further.
Fascinating and empowering, studying sociology is just like taking the ‘Red Pill’ in the Matrix and seeing how deep the rabbit hole goes.
Stuart Winchester
Owner, Work Tank