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  2. Mar 2, 2017 · Typification is the process of relying on general knowledge as a way of constructing ideas about people and the social world.

    • Ashley Crossman
  3. Dec 10, 2009 · This paper examines Alfred Schutz’s insights on types and typification. Beginning with a brief overview of the history and meaning of typification in interpretive sociology, the paper further addresses both the ubiquity and the necessity of typification in social life and scientific method.

    • Kwang-ki Kim, Tim J. Berard
    • 2009
  4. Two basic orders of types are distinguished: the existential type, developed by participants in social systems, and the constructed type, formulated by the social scientist for purposes of explicating those social systems.

    • John C. McKinney
    • 1969
  5. When social relations have crystallized into a ‘second nature’ and social subsystems follow their own pseudonatural laws, ‘dehumanizing’ theories (e.g., structuralism, functionalism, and systems theory) and methods (e.g., linear modeling and statistical regression) can and have to be applied.

  6. May 15, 2022 · A typology is formed by grouping cases or participants into different types on the basis of their common features, with consideration of how each unique individual represents a particular pattern of features.

  7. Aug 4, 2023 · The typification of roles and interactions by members of a social collective is an initial stage of institutional formation (Berger and Luckmann, 1967). 5 Typification emerges from the routinization of social practices and the classification of component roles and interaction orders. 6 Groups generate routines to coordinate activities ...

  8. I then describe the phenomenological foundations of typification, how sociocultural and linguistic anthropologists have approached it, and the accompanying challenges related to translation and representation.

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