Social Sanctions

Authors

  • Sungsidh Piriyarangsan College of Social Innovation, Rangsit University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61462/cujss.v46i2.1206

Keywords:

Social sanctions, New social movements, Public sphere, Discourse, Discursive practice

Abstract

Major objective of this research is to study the characteristics of the existing measures and mechanism of social sanctions. Various surveys for information and data collection had been conducted to study social sanctions and anti – corruption measures as well as major mass movement in Thailand and in some foreign countries i.e. the Philippines, Indonesia, Egypt and Taiwan.The study revealed that social sanctions have become a part of socialization process which well collaborated with norms, mediators and sub - social units (family, poor group, tertiary group, schooling system, media and globalization paradigm).  All these social agents would be functioning one way or another generating both positive and negative impact known as “Carrot and Stick” that expressed gratitude and admiration toward one who exhibited good deeds to the society otherwise enforced penalty to those who broke social norms and values.

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References

Heckathorn, Douglas D.1990. Collective sanctions and compliance norms: A formal theory of group mediated social control. American Sociological Review 55 (June): 366-384.

Khan, H.Mustag. 1989. Clientelism, corruption and capitalist development. Ph.d.diss.Cambridge University.

Netter, Brian. 2005. Avoiding the shameful backlash: social repercussions for the increased use of alternative sanctions. Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 96(1): 188-189.

Radcliffe-Brown, A.R. 1952. Structure and function in primitive society. Wilmington, IL: The Free Press.

Scott, James C. 1985. Weapons of the weak everyday forms of peasant resistance. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.

Thompson, E.P. 1966.The making of the English working class. New York: Vintage Books.

Verboon, Peter, and Marius van Dijke. 2010. When do severe sanctions enhance compliance? The role of procedural fairness. Journal of Economic Psychology 32(1): 120-130.

Whitmeyer, Jospeph M. 2002. Elites and popular nationalism. Journal of Sociology 53 (September): 630-632.

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Published

06-12-2022

How to Cite

Piriyarangsan, Sungsidh. 2022. “Social Sanctions”. Chulalongkorn University Journal of Social Sciences 46 (2). Bangkok, Thailand:63-84. https://doi.org/10.61462/cujss.v46i2.1206.

Issue

Section

Research Articles