agency theory

19
AGENCY THEORY By Stanley Milgram

Upload: kemal

Post on 22-Feb-2016

238 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

By Stanley Milgram. Agency Theory. Learning Objectives. By the end of the session y ou will be able to: D escribe Agency Theory using appropriate terminology Evaluate Agency theory using ‘ CASTLES’. Agency Theory. THIS THEORY IS BASED ON THE CONCEPT OF AN “AGENTIC STATE” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Agency Theory

AGENCY THEORYBy Stanley Milgram

Page 2: Agency Theory

Learning Objectives By the end of the session you will be

able to:

Describe Agency Theory using appropriate terminology

Evaluate Agency theory using ‘CASTLES’

Page 3: Agency Theory

Agency TheoryTHIS THEORY IS BASED ON THE

CONCEPT OF AN

“AGENTIC STATE”

This is a state of mind that people shift in to

Page 4: Agency Theory

Agency theory Early humans found that by working in

groups with leaders (rather than autonomously) they had a better chance of survival

Evolutionary theory suggests that such a hierarchical social system has been passed on genetically

Page 5: Agency Theory
Page 6: Agency Theory

Milgram suggested that children learn to act agentically from their parents and schools

Page 7: Agency Theory

Milgram (1974) claims that our social systems encourage high levels of obedience.

Page 8: Agency Theory

Key terms Agentic state Autonomous state Moral strain

Page 9: Agency Theory

Agentic state According to Milgram, this means that

when a person obeys someone in authority they become their agent and give up their free will

e.g. in Milgram’s experiment, the pps (teacher) became the agent of the researcher following out his order and obeying his will

(imagine an estate agent selling a house on the orders of the owner)

Page 10: Agency Theory

Agency theory suggests That when participants are giving

shocks the person feels they are acting as the agent of the person in charge.

Page 11: Agency Theory

Agentic State Milgram suggested that two things must

happen for a person to enter the Agentic state

1. The person giving the orders must be seen as legitimate

2. The person being ordered about is able to believe that the authority will accept responsibility for what happens

Page 12: Agency Theory

Making an agentic shift is a coping mechanism Cognitive psychologists would say we

have developed a schema for avoiding confrontation.

In Milgram’s study, slipping into an agentic state whereby you do as your told and don’t think, helps you to cope with any conflicts, and avoid any direct confrontation.

Page 13: Agency Theory

Autonomous State This is the opposite to an agentic state - this is where an individual is free thinking and able to make their own decision

Page 14: Agency Theory

Autonomous StateAutonomy means being under ones own control and being in charge of yourself.

HAVING FREE WILL

Page 15: Agency Theory

Moral Strain This means feeling uncomfortable with

your behaviour because you know it is wrong and it goes against your own values – Milgram’s pps felt moral strain when they continued to obey even though they felt it was wrong, but felt unable to disobey

How did they display moral strain?

Page 16: Agency Theory

Evaluation Milgram’s Agency theory can offer a credible

explanation for the actions of war criminals who claim they were ‘only following orders’ such as the My Lai massacre in Vietnam

Page 17: Agency Theory

Strengths

Milgram’s experiment can be used to support agency theory. It does provide an explanation of why people continue to give electric shocks just because another told them to.

Other experiments into obedience such as Hoffling’s have also found very high levels of obedience to immoral orders. They can also be used to support agency theory.

 

Page 18: Agency Theory

Weaknesses There is no physical evidence that such a state exists. For

example there are no Brain scans or e.e.g.’s that show when a person is or isn’t in the agentic state.

Many of Milgrams participants do seem to have been able to move out of the state and refuse at some point. The theory doesn’t explain how or why this may happen.

The theory is very vague in many ways. Milgram is not clear with regard to the cognitive or the physiological features of this so called agentic state.

French and Ravens social power theory provides an alternative theory of why people obey.

Page 19: Agency Theory