{"id":168,"date":"2023-08-09T18:35:37","date_gmt":"2023-08-09T18:35:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/chapter\/4-3-living-in-contemporary-society\/"},"modified":"2023-09-07T21:02:36","modified_gmt":"2023-09-07T21:02:36","slug":"4-3-living-in-contemporary-society","status":"publish","type":"chapter","link":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/chapter\/4-3-living-in-contemporary-society\/","title":{"raw":"4.3. Living in Contemporary Society","rendered":"4.3. Living in Contemporary Society"},"content":{"raw":"The reason why Durkheim, Marx and Weber are still read by sociologists is that they provided key insights into the formation of modern society that remain relevant today. Nevertheless, life in modern society is subject to constant change. How can <span style=\"color: #000000;\">Durkheim's, Marx's, and Weber's analyses be updated to describe the key features of 21st century life?\n<\/span>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Updating Durkheim: Postmodern Society and Neo-Tribalism<\/span><\/h1>\nDurkheim predicted that there would be periods of <strong>anomie \u2014<\/strong> normlessness, or a lack of common norms \u2014 as the small, isolated societies of <strong>mechanical solidarity<\/strong> were replaced by modern mass societies of <strong>organic solidarity<\/strong>. In the absence of a collective conscience and shared rituals, the complex division of labour in society would lead it to become increasingly divergent, heterogeneous and atomized. However, this anomie would be short-lived and temporary as the complex division of labour of organic societies stabilized. Eventually societies would emerge as cohesive, self-regulating systems of interdependent components and a new basis of social solidarity and social equilibrium would be established.\n\nIn the late 20th century, Jean Francois Lyotard (1924\u20131998), observing that the model of a unified, functionally cohesive society no longer described the way people actually connected with each other, suggested that Durkheim was right about anomie and the fragmentation of society but wrong about the nature of the social bond that was emerging (Lyotard, 1980). Rather than society operating as a cohesive interdependent whole, societies were discontinuous and institutions operated \"in patches.\" He described this tendency as <em>postmodern<\/em>. <strong>Postmodern society<\/strong> had to be conceived as social heterogeneity without social solidarity.\n\n[caption id=\"attachment_167\" align=\"alignright\" width=\"300\"]<img class=\"wp-image-164 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man-300x200.jpg\" alt=\"Photo of a giant burning effigy of a man on top of a space ship like structure\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\"> <strong>Figure 4.24<\/strong> The Burning Man festival held annually in Black Rock City, a temporary city built in northwestern Nevada. This event has many qualities of neo-tribalism, focused on a brief, intense gathering of a disperse community to celebrate artistic creation, self-expression, and self-reliance. (Image courtesy of Julia Wold\/Flickr.) <span class=\"cc-license-identifier\"><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-NC-SA 2.0<\/a>\u00a0<\/span>[\/caption]\n\nNew forms of social bond emerge in this context. While the division of labour into occupational specializations produces interdependence, such as the complex chains of social relationship in global supply chains, there is a parallel division of identities which produces fragmentation. In line with Durkheim's analysis of premodern tribal affiliations, <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">Maffesoli<\/span> (1996) describes the formation of contemporary <strong>neo-tribes<\/strong>, <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">groups of people bound together in communities of feeling who gather at <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">particular times and places for specific reasons and then disband. These are <strong>communities of feeling<\/strong> in the sense that, instead of being based on ideologies or traditional sources of identity like class, locality, religion, occupation, education, or ethnicity, etc., otherwise geographically or socially disperse people come together in a bounded, usually public, space for a discrete time period to express emotional energies. They create a temporary haven based on shared feeling, ambience, sensibility, taste, or atmosphere. However, rather than forming a new, permanent basis of social solidarity, neo-tribal gatherings \u2014 \"huge rallies, crowds of all kinds, collective trances, fusion through sport, ecstasy through music, religious or cultural effervescences\" (Maffesoli, 2004) \u2014 represent only episodic, if intense, social attachments. They satisfy a desire for belonging, but only temporarily or as needed.\n<\/span>\n\nOn the other hand, the contemporary experience of <strong>siloization<\/strong> through social media \u2014 the process by which groups become isolated in communication \"silos\" in ways that hinder their communication and cooperation with others \u2014 indicates the way in which social identities become fragmented, and societies themselves no longer share common universes of meaning or definitions of reality. The algorithms and social networking functions of social media platforms like Facebook enable the spread of conspiracy theories and alternate realities by creating \"echo chambers\" and conditions of confirmation bias that create strong in-group identities unhinged from outside input (Theocharis et al., 2021).\n\nPart of Lyotard's (1984) analysis of the postmodern condition is people's \"incredulity toward meta-narratives\" as noted in <a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/part\/chapter-3-culture\/\">Chapter 3. Culture<\/a>. People become disaffected with modernity's big unifying (meta) stories of social progress through scientific knowledge, enlightened morality, social emancipation, national destiny, etc. These present an image of modern society as having a historical direction, a systematicity and universality. Bauman (1991) argues instead that \"the postmodern condition is a site of constant mobility and change, but no clear direction of development.\" He suggests Durkheim's anomie is a permanent condition of contemporary life. But rather than the breakdown of society into an aggregate of isolated individuals each pursuing their narrow self interest, as the term anomie sometimes suggests, the underlying desire of people to be together leads to the creation of new subcultures, communities of feeling and sources of identification and self-construction.\n<h1 style=\"text-align: left;\">Updating Marx: Neoliberalism and the Post-Fordist Economy<\/h1>\nOne of the key arguments that sociologists draw from Marx's analysis is to show that capitalism is not simply an economic system but a social system. The dynamics of capitalism are not a set of obscure economic concerns to be relegated to the business section of the newspaper, but the architecture that underlies the newspaper\u2019s front page headlines; in fact, every headline in the paper. At the time when Marx was developing his analysis, <b>capitalism<\/b> was still a relatively new economic system, an economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of goods and the means to produce them. It was also a system that was inherently unstable and prone to crisis, yet increasingly global in its reach. Today capitalism has left no place on earth and no aspect of daily life untouched.\n\nAs a social system, one of the main characteristics of capitalism is incessant change, which is why the culture of capitalism is often referred to as <strong>modernity<\/strong>. The cultural life of capitalist society can be described as a series of successive \u201cpresents,\u201d each of which defines what is modern, new, or fashionable for a brief time before fading away into obscurity like the 78 rpm record, the 8-track tape, the CD, and even the DVD. As Marx and Engels put it, \u201cConstant revolutionizing of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty, and agitation distinguish the bourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. All fast-frozen relations \u2026 are swept away, all new ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air\u2026\u201d (1977\/1848). From the ghost towns that dot the Canadian landscape to the expectation of having a lifetime career, every element of social life under capitalism has a limited duration.\n\nMany of the aspects of social life that have been changing over the late 20th and early 21st centuries have been due to a change in the <strong>mode of regulation<\/strong> of capitalism (Lipietz, 1987). The mode of regulation refers to the ensemble of policies,<span class=\"ws9b\"> rules, patterns of conduct, <\/span>organizational forms, and institutions which stabilize capitalist accumulation of profits. Marx's analysis can be updated to examine how the growth in inequality and the housing crisis, for example, are products of a shift in governmental policy from a <strong>welfare state<\/strong> model of redistribution of resources to a <strong>neoliberal<\/strong> model of free market distribution of resources (see <a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/part\/chapter-9-social-inequality\/\">Chapter 9. Social Inequality in Canada<\/a>). This transition does not take place in a vacuum. Just as global capitalism is an economic system characterized by constant change, so too is the relationship between global capitalism and national modes of regulation and state policy.\n\nThroughout the 19th and first half of the 20th century, the role of the state in the wealthy countries of the global north was typically limited to providing the legal mechanisms and enforcement to protect private property. Industrial capitalism itself was for the most part regulated solely by free market competition until stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression of the 1930s. It was recognized that the capacity for producing commodities had far exceeded the ability of people earning low wages to buy them (Harvey, 1989).\n\n[caption id=\"attachment_167\" align=\"alignright\" width=\"300\"]<img class=\"wp-image-165\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Figure_18_00_01.jpg\" alt=\"A black and white photo of people working on a car assembly-line.\" width=\"300\" height=\"232\"> <strong>Figure 4.25<\/strong> Today, the jobs of these assembly-line workers are increasingly being eliminated as new technology are introduced. (Photo courtesy of John Lloyd\/Flickr.) <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/2.0\/\">CC BY 2.0<\/a>[\/caption]\n\nThe economic model of <strong>Fordism<\/strong>, adopted in the wealthy Northern countries, offered a solution to the crisis by creating a system of intensive mass production (maximum use of machinery and minute divisions of labour), cheap standardized products, high wages, and mass consumption. This system required a disciplined work force and labour peace, however, because labour disruptions became increasingly costly.\u00a0 This is one reason why states began to take a different role in the economy.\n\nThe Post-World War II labour-management compromise or \u201caccord\u201d involved the recognition and institutionalization of labour unions, the mediation of the state in capital\/labour disputes, the use of taxes and Keynesian economic policy to address economic recessions, and the gradual roll out of social safety net provisions. This set of policies collectively became known as the <strong>welfare state<\/strong>. In a high wage\/high consumption economy, the ability of individuals to continue to consume even when misfortune struck was paramount, so unemployment insurance, pensions, health care, and disability provisions were important components of the new accord. The accord also reaffirmed the rights of private property or capital to introduce new technology, to reorganize production as they saw fit, and to invest wherever they pleased. Therefore, it was not a system of <em>economic<\/em> democracy or socialism. Nevertheless, the claims of full employment, continued prosperity, and the creation of a \u201cjust society\u201d appeared plausible within the confines of the capitalist economic system of the global North.\n\n[caption id=\"attachment_167\" align=\"alignleft\" width=\"225\"]<img class=\"wp-image-166 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Pierre_Trudeau_1975-225x300-1.jpg\" alt=\"&quot;&quot;\" width=\"225\" height=\"300\"> <strong>Figure 4.26<\/strong> Pierre Trudeau (shown here in a photo from 1975) was elected leader of the Liberal Party at the 1968 convention, where he stated, \u201cCanada must be a just society\u201d (Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.) <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.en\">CC0 1.0<\/a>[\/caption]\n\nWhen Fordism and the welfare state system began to break down due to declining corporate productivity and profitability in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the relationship between the state and the economy started to change again. A new economic regime based on <strong>flexible accumulation<\/strong> began to emerge (Harvey, 1989). Flexible accumulation refers to the abandonment of large scale mass production to <span style=\"color: #ff0000;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><strong>lean production<\/strong> and just-in-time inventory delivery systems which reduce times within the production system as well as response times from suppliers to customers. It replaced the focus on full-time, high wage, often unionized employment with full benefits to a system reliant on <strong>precarious employment<\/strong>, based on subcontracting, temporary contracts, outsourcing, and involuntary part-time work. With the globalization of production, workers in the Fordist economies of the 1st World also found themselves competing with low wage workers in the 3rd World. This lead to more flexibility for employers but a decline in job security, benefits, and real wages for the majority of workers. <\/span><\/span>\n\n<span style=\"color: #ff0000;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Flexible accumulation also changed the model of mass production for mass markets by shifting to small batch production of consumer goods for niche markets. <strong>Niche market consumption<\/strong> replaced the one-size-fits-all model of consumer product in Fordism. Describing the production of Model-T cars, Henry Ford was quoted as saying <span class=\"ILfuVd\"><span class=\"hgKElc\">\"Any customer can have a car painted any colour that he wants, so long as it is black.\" Instead of mass market products, with niche market consumption\u00a0<\/span><\/span>specialized products are increasingly tailored for specific market segments, product innovation accelerates and turn-over times for products decrease, and manufacturing becomes more responsive to quick-changing trends and fashions mobilized through the devices of focused advertising and marketing.\u00a0<\/span>\n<\/span>\n\nIn step with the development of the post-Fordist economy of lean production, precarious employment, and niche market consumption, the state began to withdraw from its guarantee of providing universal social services and social security. <strong>Neoliberalism<\/strong> is the term used to define the new rationality of government, which abandons the interventionist model of the welfare state to emphasize the use of \u201cfree market\u201d mechanisms to regulate society. As a global system, neoliberalism also involved the creation of free trade agreements and international organizations (like the G7, the World Trade Organization, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund) that imposed open \u201cfree\u201d markets across national borders, the deregulation of trade and investment, and the privatization of public goods and services. Since the 1970s, capital accumulation has taken place less and less in the context of national economies, and more in the context of international flows of capital investment and disinvestment in an increasingly integrated world market. The globalization of investment and production means that capital is increasingly able to shift production around the world to where labour costs are cheapest and profit greatest.<span style=\"color: #ff0000;\">\n<\/span>\n\nThus, <strong>neoliberalism<\/strong> is a mode of regulation or set of policies in which the state reduces its role in providing public services, regulating industry, redistributing wealth, and protecting \u201cthe commons\u201d \u2014 i.e., the collective resources that exist for everyone to share (the environment, public infrastructure, public spaces, community facilities, airwaves, etc.). These policies are promoted by advocates as ways of addressing the \"inefficiency of big government,\u201d the \u201cburden on the taxpayer,\u201d the \"need to cut red tape,\u201d and the \u201cculture of entitlement and welfare dependency.\u201d In the place of \u201cbig\u201d government, the virtues of the competitive marketplace are extolled. The market is said to promote more efficiency, lower costs, pragmatic decision making, non-favouritism, and a disciplined work ethic, etc.\n\nOf course the facts often tell a different story. For example, government-funded health care in Canada costs far less per person than private health care in the United States (OECD, 2015). A country like Norway, which has a much higher rate of taxation than Canada, also has much lower unemployment, lower income inequality, lower inflation, better public services, a higher standard of living \u2014 and yet nevertheless has a globally competitive corporate sector with substantial state ownership and control, especially in the areas of oil and gas production which is 80% owned by the Norwegian state (Campbell, 2013). The policies of deregulation that caused the financial crisis of 2008, led even Alan Greenspan (b. 1926), the neoliberal economist and former Chairman of the United States Federal Reserve, to acknowledge that the model of free market \u201crationality\u201d was flawed (CBC News, 2013). Since the financial crisis was a product of Greenspan\u2019s tenure at the Federal Reserve, and a result of the neoliberal policy of tax cuts and market deregulation that he advocated, his acknowledgment of the failure of free market rationality is significant.\n<h1 style=\"text-align: left;\">Updating Weber: Algorithmic Rationality, Digital Capitalism, and Technopopulism<\/h1>\nWeber described <strong>rationalization<\/strong> as a key process in the formation of modern societies. Rationalization meant that every aspect of social organization was subject to calculation, technical innovation and ways of increasing efficiency. In the development of the <strong>information society<\/strong>, discussed earlier in the chapter, these processes have intensified. A premium is placed on 'smart,' innovative and responsive solutions to problems, aided by swift, decisive, and well-informed decision-making. But in many respects, as Weber proposed at the beginning of the 20th century, efficient systems and technologies meant to liberate humans end up creating new <strong>iron cages<\/strong>. Humans themselves become resources and tools within the systems they created.\n\nOne key site of 21st century rationalization has been the introduction of algorithms and artificial intelligence into decision making processes from social media search functions to financial transactions. <strong>Algorithms<\/strong> are sets of instructions used to solve a problem or perform a task (Milner and Traub, 2021).\n<blockquote><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">They are used <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">to aggregate data from different sources to build an <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">increasingly detailed picture of personal habits and <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">preferences, which companies feed into predictive <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">tools<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">that<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">model<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">future<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">outcomes<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">and<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">produce <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">categorizations, scores, and rankings. Big data is used <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">not only to sell targeted advertising, but also to make an <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">increasing array of high-stakes<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">automated decisions <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">around employment, investment, lending, and pricing <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">in the private sphere and consequential government <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">decisions in areas including criminal justice, education, <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">and access to public benefits (Milner and Traub, 2021).<\/span><\/blockquote>\nAdvocates of algorithmic rationality present it as faster, technically superior, and more impartial than human decision making, in the same way Weber described the rationalized organization model of bureaucracy. For example, Johnson et al. (2013) described the transition to automated decision making in high frequency stock trading after 2006. This creates a new digital environment for trading in which algorithmic agents and automated cognition can make massive numbers of decisions more quickly than humans can comprehend. An investment analyst is quoted as saying \"11% of all 2014 observable orders in the Canadian marketplace lasted less than one millisecond\" (Peters, 2017).\n\n[caption id=\"attachment_167\" align=\"aligncenter\" width=\"560\"]<img class=\"wp-image-167 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/robots.jpg\" alt=\"Giant robotic face looking down on sitting robotic children\" width=\"560\" height=\"375\"> <strong>Figure 4.27<\/strong> Images of a robotic future are common in science fiction. To what degree do algorithms and \"deep learning\" technologies allow human behaviour to become predictable and programmable? (Image courtesy of\u00a0 Cristian Eslava\/Flickr. ) <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-SA 2.0<\/a>[\/caption]\n\nHowever, as critics point out, the algorithmic decisions can only be as good as the input data they draw on and the assumptions made in the coding. Johnson et al. (2013) correlated the use of millisecond-scale stock market decision making with the financial collapse of 2008. In other applications such as credit assessments, insurance, policing, and public services delivery, algorithms are used in actuarial reasoning. <strong>Actuarialism<\/strong> is the use of historical data about social groups to calculate risk assessments about unknown individuals. What is new in this is the application of computing power to the huge quantitity of behavioral trace data collected from things users do on their \"smart\" devices (phones, fitbits, smart appliances, etc.). Choices people make on social media and digital services, such as clicking on links or \"like,\" and information collected about people by devices in the environment are captured, accumulated and analysed to build profiles of people's behaviour. However, the key premise of actuarial decision-making is \u201cthe belief that patterns observed in the past provide useful information about activities and events that may take place in the future\u201d (Gandy, 2016, cited in Burrell and Fourcade, 2021). Due to the unevenness of data collection and a context of historical social inequalities, even the most impartial automatic decision making to assess the credit, medical, or criminal risk of a particular individual threatens to become a self-fulfilling prophecy, reproducing existing inequalities of treatment by institutions.\n\nAlgorithmic reason is one component of a broader array of issues posed by intensified processes of rationalization in the 21st century. <strong>Surveillance capitalism<\/strong> is based on surveilling, extracting, and commodifying the exchange of digital information over data networks including intimate personal details. Zuboff (2019) argues that the goal of surveillance capitalism is to extract behavioural detail from people's use of free services like Google and Facebook to create predictions that effectively anticipate future behaviour. These can be used to automate behaviour by providing the knowledge to engineer the parameters or context around a particular activity or choice and direct change toward a desired outcome.\u00a0 Similarly,<strong> data colonialism<\/strong> is the transformation of social life through apps, software platforms, and smart objects into the raw material of data as a new stage in the centuries long colonial process of seizing territory and extracting resources. All of social life around the globe is potentially disposessed from its \"owners\" and datified through the daily processes and interactions that use or require digital technologies (Couldry and Mejias, 2019). Finally, <strong>technopopulism<\/strong> represents a potentially new form of post-democratic political reconfiguration in which populist movements abandon \"unresponsive\" democratic procedures to unite \"the people\" against elites and common enemies. Governance is taken over by \"problem-solving\" technical elites who dispense with the perceived technical incompetence and social divisions of parliamentary democracy (Bickerton and Accetti, 2021). Indications of this model can be seen in the \"New Labour\" governments in the UK, the Macron government in France, the Five Star Movement in Italy and Donald Trump's attempts to use business strategies \u2014 \"the art of the deal\" \u2014 in domestic conflicts and international diplomacy in the U.S.\n<h1 class=\"credit\">Media Attributions<\/h1>\n<ul>\n \t<li><strong>Figure 4.24<\/strong>\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.Flickr.com\/photos\/34507951@N07\/12218156483\">Burning Man 2013<\/a> by Julia Wolf, via Flickr, is used under a <span class=\"cc-license-identifier\"><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-NC-SA 2.0<\/a>\u00a0 licence.\n<\/span><\/li>\n \t<li><strong>Figure 4.25 <\/strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.Flickr.com\/photos\/hugo90\/5422793573\">Lloyd Hartnett assembly line in 1957<\/a> by John Lloyd, via Flickr, is used under a <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/2.0\/\">CC BY 2.0<\/a> licence.<\/li>\n \t<li><strong>Figure 4.26<\/strong>\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Pierre_Trudeau_%281975%29.jpg\">Pierre Trudeau 1975<\/a>\u00a0by Rob Mieremet at Photo collection Anefo, National Archive\/ \u00a0<a class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\/\/proxy.handle.net\/10648\/ac62a5f2-d0b4-102d-bcf8-003048976d84\" rel=\"nofollow\">Nationaal Archief<\/a>, via Wikimedia Commons, is used under a <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.en\">CC0 1.0<\/a> public domain dedication licence.<\/li>\n \t<li><strong>Figure 4.27<\/strong> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.Flickr.com\/photos\/53152904@N00\/3758549633\">Sex Life of Robots | Michael Sullivan<\/a>\u00a0by Cristian Eslava, via Flickr, is used under a <span class=\"cc-license-identifier\"><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-SA 2.0<\/a> licence.\n<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>","rendered":"<p>The reason why Durkheim, Marx and Weber are still read by sociologists is that they provided key insights into the formation of modern society that remain relevant today. Nevertheless, life in modern society is subject to constant change. How can <span style=\"color: #000000;\">Durkheim&#8217;s, Marx&#8217;s, and Weber&#8217;s analyses be updated to describe the key features of 21st century life?<br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: left;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Updating Durkheim: Postmodern Society and Neo-Tribalism<\/span><\/h1>\n<p>Durkheim predicted that there would be periods of <strong>anomie \u2014<\/strong> normlessness, or a lack of common norms \u2014 as the small, isolated societies of <strong>mechanical solidarity<\/strong> were replaced by modern mass societies of <strong>organic solidarity<\/strong>. In the absence of a collective conscience and shared rituals, the complex division of labour in society would lead it to become increasingly divergent, heterogeneous and atomized. However, this anomie would be short-lived and temporary as the complex division of labour of organic societies stabilized. Eventually societies would emerge as cohesive, self-regulating systems of interdependent components and a new basis of social solidarity and social equilibrium would be established.<\/p>\n<p>In the late 20th century, Jean Francois Lyotard (1924\u20131998), observing that the model of a unified, functionally cohesive society no longer described the way people actually connected with each other, suggested that Durkheim was right about anomie and the fragmentation of society but wrong about the nature of the social bond that was emerging (Lyotard, 1980). Rather than society operating as a cohesive interdependent whole, societies were discontinuous and institutions operated &#8220;in patches.&#8221; He described this tendency as <em>postmodern<\/em>. <strong>Postmodern society<\/strong> had to be conceived as social heterogeneity without social solidarity.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_167\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-167\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-164 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man-300x200.jpg\" alt=\"Photo of a giant burning effigy of a man on top of a space ship like structure\" width=\"300\" height=\"200\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man-300x200.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man-768x511.jpg 768w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man-65x43.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man-225x150.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man-350x233.jpg 350w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/08\/Burning-Man.jpg 799w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-167\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Figure 4.24<\/strong> The Burning Man festival held annually in Black Rock City, a temporary city built in northwestern Nevada. This event has many qualities of neo-tribalism, focused on a brief, intense gathering of a disperse community to celebrate artistic creation, self-expression, and self-reliance. (Image courtesy of Julia Wold\/Flickr.) <span class=\"cc-license-identifier\"><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-NC-SA 2.0<\/a>\u00a0<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>New forms of social bond emerge in this context. While the division of labour into occupational specializations produces interdependence, such as the complex chains of social relationship in global supply chains, there is a parallel division of identities which produces fragmentation. In line with Durkheim&#8217;s analysis of premodern tribal affiliations, <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">Maffesoli<\/span> (1996) describes the formation of contemporary <strong>neo-tribes<\/strong>, <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">groups of people bound together in communities of feeling who gather at <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">particular times and places for specific reasons and then disband. These are <strong>communities of feeling<\/strong> in the sense that, instead of being based on ideologies or traditional sources of identity like class, locality, religion, occupation, education, or ethnicity, etc., otherwise geographically or socially disperse people come together in a bounded, usually public, space for a discrete time period to express emotional energies. They create a temporary haven based on shared feeling, ambience, sensibility, taste, or atmosphere. However, rather than forming a new, permanent basis of social solidarity, neo-tribal gatherings \u2014 &#8220;huge rallies, crowds of all kinds, collective trances, fusion through sport, ecstasy through music, religious or cultural effervescences&#8221; (Maffesoli, 2004) \u2014 represent only episodic, if intense, social attachments. They satisfy a desire for belonging, but only temporarily or as needed.<br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<p>On the other hand, the contemporary experience of <strong>siloization<\/strong> through social media \u2014 the process by which groups become isolated in communication &#8220;silos&#8221; in ways that hinder their communication and cooperation with others \u2014 indicates the way in which social identities become fragmented, and societies themselves no longer share common universes of meaning or definitions of reality. The algorithms and social networking functions of social media platforms like Facebook enable the spread of conspiracy theories and alternate realities by creating &#8220;echo chambers&#8221; and conditions of confirmation bias that create strong in-group identities unhinged from outside input (Theocharis et al., 2021).<\/p>\n<p>Part of Lyotard&#8217;s (1984) analysis of the postmodern condition is people&#8217;s &#8220;incredulity toward meta-narratives&#8221; as noted in <a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/part\/chapter-3-culture\/\">Chapter 3. Culture<\/a>. People become disaffected with modernity&#8217;s big unifying (meta) stories of social progress through scientific knowledge, enlightened morality, social emancipation, national destiny, etc. These present an image of modern society as having a historical direction, a systematicity and universality. Bauman (1991) argues instead that &#8220;the postmodern condition is a site of constant mobility and change, but no clear direction of development.&#8221; He suggests Durkheim&#8217;s anomie is a permanent condition of contemporary life. But rather than the breakdown of society into an aggregate of isolated individuals each pursuing their narrow self interest, as the term anomie sometimes suggests, the underlying desire of people to be together leads to the creation of new subcultures, communities of feeling and sources of identification and self-construction.<\/p>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: left;\">Updating Marx: Neoliberalism and the Post-Fordist Economy<\/h1>\n<p>One of the key arguments that sociologists draw from Marx&#8217;s analysis is to show that capitalism is not simply an economic system but a social system. The dynamics of capitalism are not a set of obscure economic concerns to be relegated to the business section of the newspaper, but the architecture that underlies the newspaper\u2019s front page headlines; in fact, every headline in the paper. At the time when Marx was developing his analysis, <b>capitalism<\/b> was still a relatively new economic system, an economic system characterized by private or corporate ownership of goods and the means to produce them. It was also a system that was inherently unstable and prone to crisis, yet increasingly global in its reach. Today capitalism has left no place on earth and no aspect of daily life untouched.<\/p>\n<p>As a social system, one of the main characteristics of capitalism is incessant change, which is why the culture of capitalism is often referred to as <strong>modernity<\/strong>. The cultural life of capitalist society can be described as a series of successive \u201cpresents,\u201d each of which defines what is modern, new, or fashionable for a brief time before fading away into obscurity like the 78 rpm record, the 8-track tape, the CD, and even the DVD. As Marx and Engels put it, \u201cConstant revolutionizing of production, uninterrupted disturbance of all social conditions, everlasting uncertainty, and agitation distinguish the bourgeois epoch from all earlier ones. All fast-frozen relations \u2026 are swept away, all new ones become antiquated before they can ossify. All that is solid melts into air\u2026\u201d (1977\/1848). From the ghost towns that dot the Canadian landscape to the expectation of having a lifetime career, every element of social life under capitalism has a limited duration.<\/p>\n<p>Many of the aspects of social life that have been changing over the late 20th and early 21st centuries have been due to a change in the <strong>mode of regulation<\/strong> of capitalism (Lipietz, 1987). The mode of regulation refers to the ensemble of policies,<span class=\"ws9b\"> rules, patterns of conduct, <\/span>organizational forms, and institutions which stabilize capitalist accumulation of profits. Marx&#8217;s analysis can be updated to examine how the growth in inequality and the housing crisis, for example, are products of a shift in governmental policy from a <strong>welfare state<\/strong> model of redistribution of resources to a <strong>neoliberal<\/strong> model of free market distribution of resources (see <a href=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/part\/chapter-9-social-inequality\/\">Chapter 9. Social Inequality in Canada<\/a>). This transition does not take place in a vacuum. Just as global capitalism is an economic system characterized by constant change, so too is the relationship between global capitalism and national modes of regulation and state policy.<\/p>\n<p>Throughout the 19th and first half of the 20th century, the role of the state in the wealthy countries of the global north was typically limited to providing the legal mechanisms and enforcement to protect private property. Industrial capitalism itself was for the most part regulated solely by free market competition until stock market crash of 1929 and the Great Depression of the 1930s. It was recognized that the capacity for producing commodities had far exceeded the ability of people earning low wages to buy them (Harvey, 1989).<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_167\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-167\" style=\"width: 300px\" class=\"wp-caption alignright\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-165\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Figure_18_00_01.jpg\" alt=\"A black and white photo of people working on a car assembly-line.\" width=\"300\" height=\"232\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Figure_18_00_01.jpg 500w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Figure_18_00_01-300x232.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Figure_18_00_01-65x50.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Figure_18_00_01-225x174.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Figure_18_00_01-350x271.jpg 350w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-167\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Figure 4.25<\/strong> Today, the jobs of these assembly-line workers are increasingly being eliminated as new technology are introduced. (Photo courtesy of John Lloyd\/Flickr.) <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/2.0\/\">CC BY 2.0<\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>The economic model of <strong>Fordism<\/strong>, adopted in the wealthy Northern countries, offered a solution to the crisis by creating a system of intensive mass production (maximum use of machinery and minute divisions of labour), cheap standardized products, high wages, and mass consumption. This system required a disciplined work force and labour peace, however, because labour disruptions became increasingly costly.\u00a0 This is one reason why states began to take a different role in the economy.<\/p>\n<p>The Post-World War II labour-management compromise or \u201caccord\u201d involved the recognition and institutionalization of labour unions, the mediation of the state in capital\/labour disputes, the use of taxes and Keynesian economic policy to address economic recessions, and the gradual roll out of social safety net provisions. This set of policies collectively became known as the <strong>welfare state<\/strong>. In a high wage\/high consumption economy, the ability of individuals to continue to consume even when misfortune struck was paramount, so unemployment insurance, pensions, health care, and disability provisions were important components of the new accord. The accord also reaffirmed the rights of private property or capital to introduce new technology, to reorganize production as they saw fit, and to invest wherever they pleased. Therefore, it was not a system of <em>economic<\/em> democracy or socialism. Nevertheless, the claims of full employment, continued prosperity, and the creation of a \u201cjust society\u201d appeared plausible within the confines of the capitalist economic system of the global North.<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_167\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-167\" style=\"width: 225px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-166 size-medium\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Pierre_Trudeau_1975-225x300-1.jpg\" alt=\"&quot;&quot;\" width=\"225\" height=\"300\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Pierre_Trudeau_1975-225x300-1.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/Pierre_Trudeau_1975-225x300-1-65x87.jpg 65w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 225px) 100vw, 225px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-167\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Figure 4.26<\/strong> Pierre Trudeau (shown here in a photo from 1975) was elected leader of the Liberal Party at the 1968 convention, where he stated, \u201cCanada must be a just society\u201d (Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.) <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.en\">CC0 1.0<\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>When Fordism and the welfare state system began to break down due to declining corporate productivity and profitability in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the relationship between the state and the economy started to change again. A new economic regime based on <strong>flexible accumulation<\/strong> began to emerge (Harvey, 1989). Flexible accumulation refers to the abandonment of large scale mass production to <span style=\"color: #ff0000;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><strong>lean production<\/strong> and just-in-time inventory delivery systems which reduce times within the production system as well as response times from suppliers to customers. It replaced the focus on full-time, high wage, often unionized employment with full benefits to a system reliant on <strong>precarious employment<\/strong>, based on subcontracting, temporary contracts, outsourcing, and involuntary part-time work. With the globalization of production, workers in the Fordist economies of the 1st World also found themselves competing with low wage workers in the 3rd World. This lead to more flexibility for employers but a decline in job security, benefits, and real wages for the majority of workers. <\/span><\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #ff0000;\"><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Flexible accumulation also changed the model of mass production for mass markets by shifting to small batch production of consumer goods for niche markets. <strong>Niche market consumption<\/strong> replaced the one-size-fits-all model of consumer product in Fordism. Describing the production of Model-T cars, Henry Ford was quoted as saying <span class=\"ILfuVd\"><span class=\"hgKElc\">&#8220;Any customer can have a car painted any colour that he wants, so long as it is black.&#8221; Instead of mass market products, with niche market consumption\u00a0<\/span><\/span>specialized products are increasingly tailored for specific market segments, product innovation accelerates and turn-over times for products decrease, and manufacturing becomes more responsive to quick-changing trends and fashions mobilized through the devices of focused advertising and marketing.\u00a0<\/span><br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<p>In step with the development of the post-Fordist economy of lean production, precarious employment, and niche market consumption, the state began to withdraw from its guarantee of providing universal social services and social security. <strong>Neoliberalism<\/strong> is the term used to define the new rationality of government, which abandons the interventionist model of the welfare state to emphasize the use of \u201cfree market\u201d mechanisms to regulate society. As a global system, neoliberalism also involved the creation of free trade agreements and international organizations (like the G7, the World Trade Organization, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund) that imposed open \u201cfree\u201d markets across national borders, the deregulation of trade and investment, and the privatization of public goods and services. Since the 1970s, capital accumulation has taken place less and less in the context of national economies, and more in the context of international flows of capital investment and disinvestment in an increasingly integrated world market. The globalization of investment and production means that capital is increasingly able to shift production around the world to where labour costs are cheapest and profit greatest.<span style=\"color: #ff0000;\"><br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<p>Thus, <strong>neoliberalism<\/strong> is a mode of regulation or set of policies in which the state reduces its role in providing public services, regulating industry, redistributing wealth, and protecting \u201cthe commons\u201d \u2014 i.e., the collective resources that exist for everyone to share (the environment, public infrastructure, public spaces, community facilities, airwaves, etc.). These policies are promoted by advocates as ways of addressing the &#8220;inefficiency of big government,\u201d the \u201cburden on the taxpayer,\u201d the &#8220;need to cut red tape,\u201d and the \u201cculture of entitlement and welfare dependency.\u201d In the place of \u201cbig\u201d government, the virtues of the competitive marketplace are extolled. The market is said to promote more efficiency, lower costs, pragmatic decision making, non-favouritism, and a disciplined work ethic, etc.<\/p>\n<p>Of course the facts often tell a different story. For example, government-funded health care in Canada costs far less per person than private health care in the United States (OECD, 2015). A country like Norway, which has a much higher rate of taxation than Canada, also has much lower unemployment, lower income inequality, lower inflation, better public services, a higher standard of living \u2014 and yet nevertheless has a globally competitive corporate sector with substantial state ownership and control, especially in the areas of oil and gas production which is 80% owned by the Norwegian state (Campbell, 2013). The policies of deregulation that caused the financial crisis of 2008, led even Alan Greenspan (b. 1926), the neoliberal economist and former Chairman of the United States Federal Reserve, to acknowledge that the model of free market \u201crationality\u201d was flawed (CBC News, 2013). Since the financial crisis was a product of Greenspan\u2019s tenure at the Federal Reserve, and a result of the neoliberal policy of tax cuts and market deregulation that he advocated, his acknowledgment of the failure of free market rationality is significant.<\/p>\n<h1 style=\"text-align: left;\">Updating Weber: Algorithmic Rationality, Digital Capitalism, and Technopopulism<\/h1>\n<p>Weber described <strong>rationalization<\/strong> as a key process in the formation of modern societies. Rationalization meant that every aspect of social organization was subject to calculation, technical innovation and ways of increasing efficiency. In the development of the <strong>information society<\/strong>, discussed earlier in the chapter, these processes have intensified. A premium is placed on &#8216;smart,&#8217; innovative and responsive solutions to problems, aided by swift, decisive, and well-informed decision-making. But in many respects, as Weber proposed at the beginning of the 20th century, efficient systems and technologies meant to liberate humans end up creating new <strong>iron cages<\/strong>. Humans themselves become resources and tools within the systems they created.<\/p>\n<p>One key site of 21st century rationalization has been the introduction of algorithms and artificial intelligence into decision making processes from social media search functions to financial transactions. <strong>Algorithms<\/strong> are sets of instructions used to solve a problem or perform a task (Milner and Traub, 2021).<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">They are used <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">to aggregate data from different sources to build an <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">increasingly detailed picture of personal habits and <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">preferences, which companies feed into predictive <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">tools<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">that<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">model<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">future<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">outcomes<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">and<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">produce <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">categorizations, scores, and rankings. Big data is used <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">not only to sell targeted advertising, but also to make an <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">increasing array of high-stakes<\/span> <span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">automated decisions <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">around employment, investment, lending, and pricing <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">in the private sphere and consequential government <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">decisions in areas including criminal justice, education, <\/span><span dir=\"ltr\" role=\"presentation\">and access to public benefits (Milner and Traub, 2021).<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Advocates of algorithmic rationality present it as faster, technically superior, and more impartial than human decision making, in the same way Weber described the rationalized organization model of bureaucracy. For example, Johnson et al. (2013) described the transition to automated decision making in high frequency stock trading after 2006. This creates a new digital environment for trading in which algorithmic agents and automated cognition can make massive numbers of decisions more quickly than humans can comprehend. An investment analyst is quoted as saying &#8220;11% of all 2014 observable orders in the Canadian marketplace lasted less than one millisecond&#8221; (Peters, 2017).<\/p>\n<figure id=\"attachment_167\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-167\" style=\"width: 560px\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"wp-image-167 size-full\" src=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/hfriedmantext2\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/robots.jpg\" alt=\"Giant robotic face looking down on sitting robotic children\" width=\"560\" height=\"375\" srcset=\"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/robots.jpg 560w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/robots-300x201.jpg 300w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/robots-65x44.jpg 65w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/robots-225x151.jpg 225w, https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/440\/2023\/09\/robots-350x234.jpg 350w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 560px) 100vw, 560px\" \/><figcaption id=\"caption-attachment-167\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><strong>Figure 4.27<\/strong> Images of a robotic future are common in science fiction. To what degree do algorithms and &#8220;deep learning&#8221; technologies allow human behaviour to become predictable and programmable? (Image courtesy of\u00a0 Cristian Eslava\/Flickr. ) <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-SA 2.0<\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<p>However, as critics point out, the algorithmic decisions can only be as good as the input data they draw on and the assumptions made in the coding. Johnson et al. (2013) correlated the use of millisecond-scale stock market decision making with the financial collapse of 2008. In other applications such as credit assessments, insurance, policing, and public services delivery, algorithms are used in actuarial reasoning. <strong>Actuarialism<\/strong> is the use of historical data about social groups to calculate risk assessments about unknown individuals. What is new in this is the application of computing power to the huge quantitity of behavioral trace data collected from things users do on their &#8220;smart&#8221; devices (phones, fitbits, smart appliances, etc.). Choices people make on social media and digital services, such as clicking on links or &#8220;like,&#8221; and information collected about people by devices in the environment are captured, accumulated and analysed to build profiles of people&#8217;s behaviour. However, the key premise of actuarial decision-making is \u201cthe belief that patterns observed in the past provide useful information about activities and events that may take place in the future\u201d (Gandy, 2016, cited in Burrell and Fourcade, 2021). Due to the unevenness of data collection and a context of historical social inequalities, even the most impartial automatic decision making to assess the credit, medical, or criminal risk of a particular individual threatens to become a self-fulfilling prophecy, reproducing existing inequalities of treatment by institutions.<\/p>\n<p>Algorithmic reason is one component of a broader array of issues posed by intensified processes of rationalization in the 21st century. <strong>Surveillance capitalism<\/strong> is based on surveilling, extracting, and commodifying the exchange of digital information over data networks including intimate personal details. Zuboff (2019) argues that the goal of surveillance capitalism is to extract behavioural detail from people&#8217;s use of free services like Google and Facebook to create predictions that effectively anticipate future behaviour. These can be used to automate behaviour by providing the knowledge to engineer the parameters or context around a particular activity or choice and direct change toward a desired outcome.\u00a0 Similarly,<strong> data colonialism<\/strong> is the transformation of social life through apps, software platforms, and smart objects into the raw material of data as a new stage in the centuries long colonial process of seizing territory and extracting resources. All of social life around the globe is potentially disposessed from its &#8220;owners&#8221; and datified through the daily processes and interactions that use or require digital technologies (Couldry and Mejias, 2019). Finally, <strong>technopopulism<\/strong> represents a potentially new form of post-democratic political reconfiguration in which populist movements abandon &#8220;unresponsive&#8221; democratic procedures to unite &#8220;the people&#8221; against elites and common enemies. Governance is taken over by &#8220;problem-solving&#8221; technical elites who dispense with the perceived technical incompetence and social divisions of parliamentary democracy (Bickerton and Accetti, 2021). Indications of this model can be seen in the &#8220;New Labour&#8221; governments in the UK, the Macron government in France, the Five Star Movement in Italy and Donald Trump&#8217;s attempts to use business strategies \u2014 &#8220;the art of the deal&#8221; \u2014 in domestic conflicts and international diplomacy in the U.S.<\/p>\n<h1 class=\"credit\">Media Attributions<\/h1>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Figure 4.24<\/strong>\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/www.Flickr.com\/photos\/34507951@N07\/12218156483\">Burning Man 2013<\/a> by Julia Wolf, via Flickr, is used under a <span class=\"cc-license-identifier\"><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-nc-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-NC-SA 2.0<\/a>\u00a0 licence.<br \/>\n<\/span><\/li>\n<li><strong>Figure 4.25 <\/strong><a href=\"https:\/\/www.Flickr.com\/photos\/hugo90\/5422793573\">Lloyd Hartnett assembly line in 1957<\/a> by John Lloyd, via Flickr, is used under a <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by\/2.0\/\">CC BY 2.0<\/a> licence.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Figure 4.26<\/strong>\u00a0<a href=\"https:\/\/commons.wikimedia.org\/wiki\/File:Pierre_Trudeau_%281975%29.jpg\">Pierre Trudeau 1975<\/a>\u00a0by Rob Mieremet at Photo collection Anefo, National Archive\/ \u00a0<a class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\/\/proxy.handle.net\/10648\/ac62a5f2-d0b4-102d-bcf8-003048976d84\" rel=\"nofollow\">Nationaal Archief<\/a>, via Wikimedia Commons, is used under a <a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/publicdomain\/zero\/1.0\/deed.en\">CC0 1.0<\/a> public domain dedication licence.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Figure 4.27<\/strong> <a href=\"https:\/\/www.Flickr.com\/photos\/53152904@N00\/3758549633\">Sex Life of Robots | Michael Sullivan<\/a>\u00a0by Cristian Eslava, via Flickr, is used under a <span class=\"cc-license-identifier\"><a href=\"https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/2.0\/\">CC BY-SA 2.0<\/a> licence.<br \/>\n<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n","protected":false},"author":125,"menu_order":3,"template":"","meta":{"pb_show_title":"on","pb_short_title":"","pb_subtitle":"","pb_authors":[],"pb_section_license":""},"chapter-type":[],"contributor":[],"license":[],"class_list":["post-168","chapter","type-chapter","status-publish","hentry"],"part":138,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/168","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/chapter"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/125"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/168\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":169,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/168\/revisions\/169"}],"part":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/parts\/138"}],"metadata":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapters\/168\/metadata\/"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=168"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"chapter-type","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/pressbooks\/v2\/chapter-type?post=168"},{"taxonomy":"contributor","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/contributor?post=168"},{"taxonomy":"license","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/opentextbc.ca\/introductiontosociology3rdedition\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/license?post=168"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}