Conceptualising Constraint: Mouzelis, Archer and the Concept of Social Structure
Conceptualising Constraint: Mouzelis, Archer and the Concept of Social Structure
Key takeaways
Bibliography: Healy, K., 1998. Conceptualising Constraint: Mouzelis, Archer and the Concept of Social Structure 32.
Authors:: K Healy
Collections:: Social Theory
First-page:
This paper outlines and evaluates recent contributions by Nicos Mouzelis and Margaret Archer to the structure–agency debate. Mouzelis offers an internal reconstruction of Giddens’s structuration theory; Archer an external alternative. I show that, although representing an advance on Giddens’s position, Mouzelis’s account fails because he relies on the former’s definition of structure as comprising rules and resources. I then examine Archer’s solution to the problem. I argue that her definition of activity-dependence makes her account of the relationship between agents and structures unclear. I outline an alternative account in terms of supervenience, and argue that it contains the minimum ontological claim necessary for a realist understanding of the structure–agent relationship.
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