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sociologie

Sociologie, the French term for sociology, is the systematic study of society, social relations, and social institutions. It seeks to understand how social forces shape individual behavior and how collective patterns, norms, and organizations influence social life. The field covers topics such as family, education, economy, religion, politics, gender, race, urban life, and processes like socialization, deviance, inequality, and globalization.

Sociology employs a range of methods, including quantitative surveys and statistical analysis, qualitative interviews and ethnography,

Sociologie informs public policy, education, and social planning, and it continues to adapt to contemporary issues

and
comparative-historical
research.
Many
scholars
combine
approaches
to
address
complex
questions.
The
discipline
includes
multiple
theoretical
perspectives,
such
as
functionalism,
conflict
theory,
and
symbolic
interactionism,
among
others.
In
the
French-speaking
world,
sociologie
aligns
with
a
tradition
of
empiricism
and
social
theory,
tracing
its
roots
to
figures
like
Auguste
Comte,
who
popularized
positivism,
and
Émile
Durkheim,
who
developed
the
study
of
social
facts,
institutions,
and
collective
norms.
Karl
Marx
and
Max
Weber
have
been
influential
for
analyses
of
economy,
power,
and
rationalization.
such
as
digital
media,
migration,
and
global
inequality.
Debates
in
the
discipline
often
address
methodological
rigor,
ethics,
and
the
degree
to
which
research
should
aim
to
influence
social
change.