Sociological Glossary

Our sociological glossary is new; we are in the process of developing our online sociological glossary, with more terms to be added as we go along. If you think there is something we haven't added yet, please let us know.

Glossary

  • Rational Choice Theory

    Rational choice theory suggests that individuals make decisions based on cost-benefit analyses to maximise personal advantage.

  • Rational Choice Theory in Education

    Rational choice theory in education suggests that students and families make educational decisions by weighing costs and benefits, often influenced by class-based risk aversion.

  • Redlining

    Redlining is a discriminatory practice in which financial and social services are denied to particular neighbourhoods, often based on race or class.

  • Reflexivity

    Reflexivity in Bourdieu’s sociology refers to the need for researchers to critically examine their own position and biases when conducting social analysis.

  • Reification

    Reification, as used in Marxist thought, describes how social relationships and human-made structures come to be seen as natural, inevitable, or objective realities.

  • Relations of Production

    Relations of production refer to the social relationships and hierarchies that emerge in economic systems, particularly between owners and workers.

  • Repressive and Ideological State Apparatuses

    Louis Althusser’s distinction between repressive state apparatuses (coercive institutions like the police and military) and ideological state apparatuses (institutions that shape ideology, such as education and media).

  • Reproduction Theory

    Reproduction theory, associated with Bourdieu and others, explains how social structures perpetuate inequality across generations.

  • Research Excellence Framework (REF)

    The REF evaluates research quality in UK universities, influencing funding and institutional prestige.

  • Resource Mobilisation Theory

    Resource mobilisation theory explains the success of social movements based on their ability to acquire and use resources effectively.

  • Role Conflict

    Role conflict occurs when an individual faces incompatible demands from different social roles they occupy.

  • Role Distance

    Role distance describes how individuals sometimes deliberately act differently from their expected social roles to assert agency or identity.

  • Role Strain

    Role strain occurs when an individual experiences difficulty in fulfilling multiple expectations associated with a single social role.

  • Rural Educational Disadvantage

    Rural educational disadvantage highlights the barriers faced by students in remote areas, including fewer post-18 options and limited access to extracurricular activities.

  • Russell Group

    The Russell Group is a self-selected association of 24 research-intensive universities in the UK, often perceived as elite institutions.