Formal Social Control Methods in Society and Their Relationship with Social Psychology
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Abstract
This paper examines formal social control methods in society and their relationship with social psychology, focusing on how institutions regulate individual and collective behavior through structured mechanisms such as laws, regulations, education systems, and judicial institutions. Formal social control represents one of the most important instruments for maintaining order, stability, and cohesion within society by defining acceptable norms and sanctioning deviant behavior. From a social psychological perspective, these mechanisms do not only regulate external behavior but also influence attitudes, perceptions, conformity, and obedience among individuals. The study highlights the interaction between institutional control and psychological processes such as socialization, conformity pressure, authority obedience, and norm internalization. It also explores how individuals respond to formal control systems, either through compliance, resistance, or adaptation. By integrating sociological and social psychological perspectives, the paper aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of how formal control operates and how it shapes human behavior within structured social environments.
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