routinization

(noun)

Charismatic authority almost always endangers the boundaries set by traditional or rational (legal) authority. It tends to challenge this authority, and is thus often seen as revolutionary. Usually this charismatic authority is incorporated into society. Hereby the challenge that it presents to society will subside. The way in which this happens is called routinization.

Related Terms

  • cult of personality
  • revelation

Examples of routinization in the following topics:

  • Charismatic Authority

    • However, the constant challenge that charismatic authority presents to a particular society will eventually subside as it is incorporated into that society through routinization.
    • Routinization is the process by which "charismatic authority is succeeded by a bureaucracy controlled by a rationally established authority or by a combination of traditional and bureaucratic authority. "
    • When the leader of such a state dies or leaves office and a new charismatic leader does not appear, such a regime is likely to fall shortly thereafter unless it has become fully routinized.
  • Reach

    • The routine Network>Centrality>Reach Centrality calculates some useful measures of how close each actor is to all others.
  • Physical Health

    • Because most health services in the U.S. are paid for through insurance coverage, the low level of insurance coverage among the working and lower classes points to their low level of access to health services ranging from preventative screenings to routine medication to emergency treatment.
    • Similarly, poorer neighborhoods tend to have fewer recreational facilities and higher crime rates than wealthier ones, which decreases the feasibility of routine exercise.
    • Still, the affluent communities are more likely to have access to fresh produce, recreational facilities for exercise, preventative healthcare programs, and routine medical visits.
  • Gender

    • Kathaleen Sikes, a Navy nurse, listens to a young woman during a routine check-up at the Couva District Health Facility in Trinidad and Tobago.
  • Eigenvector of geodesic distances

    • The UCINET Network>Centrality>Eigenvector routine calculates individual actor centrality, and graph centralization using weights on the first eigenvector.
    • A limitation of the routine is that it does not calculate values for asymmetric data.
  • Optimization by tabu search

    • We ran the routine a number of times, requesting partitions into different numbers of classes.
  • Strain Theory: How Social Values Produce Deviance

    • Ritualism involves the rejection of cultural goals but the routinized acceptance of the means for achieving the goals.
  • Culture Shock

    • Again, after some time, one grows accustomed to the new culture and develops routines, marking the adjustment phase.
  • Folkways and Mores

    • Sumner also coined the term folkway to refer to norms for more routine or casual interaction.
  • Industrial Work

    • Ford's employees worked in factories, on assembly lines, doing routinized tasks over and over in order to produce cars.
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