A new complete guide for preparing for the Unified State Exam. "Social science

Name: Social science - Complete guide to prepare for the Unified State Exam.

In the directory addressed to graduates and applicants, in in full The material of the course “Social Studies” is given, which is tested on the unified state exam.
The structure of the book corresponds to the codifier of content elements in the subject, on the basis of which examination tasks - test and measurement materials of the Unified State Examination - are compiled.
The reference book presents the following sections of the course: “Society, Spiritual life of society, Man, Cognition, Politics, Economics, Social relations, Law.
A brief and visual form of presentation - in the form of diagrams and tables - ensures maximum efficiency in preparing for the exam. Sample assignments and answers to them, completing each topic, will help to objectively assess the level of knowledge.

CONTENT
Preface. 7
Section 1. SOCIETY
Topic 1. Society as a special part of the world. System structure of society. 9
Topic 2. Society and nature 13
Topic 3. Society and culture. 15
Topic 4. Interrelation of economic, social, political and spiritual spheres of society 16
Topic 5. Social institutions. 18
Topic 6. Multivariate social development. Typology of societies 20
Topic 7. The concept of social progress. thirty
Topic 8. Globalization processes and formation one humanity. 32
Topic 9. Global problems humanity 34
Section 2. SPIRITUAL LIFE OF SOCIETY
Topic 1. Culture and spiritual life 38
Topic 2. Forms and varieties of culture: folk, mass and elite; youth subculture 42
Topic 3. Mass media. 46
Topic 4. Art, its forms, main directions. 48
Topic 5. Science. 52
Topic 6. Social and personal significance of education. 55
Topic 7. Religion. The role of religion in the life of society. World religions 57
Topic 8. Morality. Moral culture 64
Topic 9. Trends in spiritual life modern Russia 71
Section 3. HUMAN
Topic 1. Man as a result of biological and social evolution. 74
Topic 2. Human existence. 77
Topic 3. Human needs and interests. 78
Topic 4. Human activity, its main forms. 80
Topic 5. Thinking and activity 88
Topic 6. The purpose and meaning of human life. 91
Topic 7. Self-realization 93
Topic 8. Individual, individuality, personality. Socialization of the individual 94
Topic 9. Inner world person 97
Topic 10. Conscious and unconscious 99
Topic 11. Self-knowledge 102
Topic 12. Behavior. 104
Topic 13. Freedom and responsibility of the individual. 106
Section 4. COGNITION
Topic 1. Knowledge of the world. 109
Topic 2. Forms of knowledge: sensual and rational, true and false. 110
Topic 3. Truth, its criteria. The Relativity of Truth 113
Topic 4. Types of human knowledge. 115
Topic 5. Scientific knowledge. 117
Topic 6. Social sciencies, their classification. 123
Topic 7. Social and humanitarian knowledge. 125
Section 5. POLICY
Topic 1. Power, its origin and types. 131
Topic 2. Politic system, its structure and functions 137
Topic 3. Signs, functions, forms of the state. 140
Topic 4. State apparatus. 149
Topic 5. Electoral systems 151
Topic 6. Political parties and movement. The emergence of a multi-party system in Russia. 156
Topic 7. Political ideology 165
Topic 8. Political regime. Types political regimes 168
Topic 9. Local government 172
Topic 10. Political culture 174
Topic 11. Civil society. 178
Topic 12. Rule of law 183
Topic 13. Man in political life. Political participation 186
Section 6. ECONOMY
Topic 1. Economics: science and economy.195
Topic 2. Economic culture203
Topic 3. Economic content of property205
Topic 4. Economic systems208
Topic 5. Diversity of markets211
Topic 6. Meters economic activity 220
Topic 7. Economic cycle and economic growth.223
Topic 8. Division of labor and specialization. 227
Topic 9. Exchange, trade.229
Topic 10. State budget.230
Topic 11. Public debt233
Topic 12. Monetary policy235
Topic 13. Tax policy.249
Topic 14. World economy: international trade, international financial system.253
Topic 15. Consumer Economics 260
Topic 16. Economics of the manufacturer 263
Topic 17. Labor market.269
Topic 18. Unemployment273
Section 7. SOCIAL RELATIONS
Topic 1. Social interaction and public relations276
Topic 2. Social groups, their classification280
Topic 3. Social status.285
Topic 4, Social role288
Topic 5. Inequality and social stratification291
Topic 6. Social mobility298
Topic 7. Social norms.301
Topic 8. Deviant behavior, its forms and manifestations303
Topic 9. Social control306
Topic 10. Family and marriage as social institutions.309
Topic 11. Demographic and family policy in Russian Federation 314
Topic 12. Youth as a social group, 317
Topic 13. Ethnic communities.319
Topic 14. Interethnic relations323
Topic 15. Social conflict and ways to resolve it. 333
Topic 16. Constitutional foundations national policy in the Russian Federation339
Topic 17. Social processes in modern Russia.342
Section 8. RIGHT
Topic 1. Law in the system of social norms 350
Topic 2. Legal system: main branches, institutions, relations. 360
Topic 3. Sources of law 363
Topic 4. Legal acts. 364
Topic 5. Legal relations 368
Topic 6. Offenses 371
Topic 7. Constitution of the Russian Federation 374
Topic 8. Public and private law 383
Topic 9. Legal responsibility and its types. 384
Topic 10. Basic concepts and norms of state, administrative, civil, labor and criminal law in the Russian Federation 389
Topic 11. Legal basis marriage and family 422
Topic 12. International documents human rights 430
Topic 13. System of judicial protection of human rights. 433
Topic 14. Fundamentals of the constitutional system of the Russian Federation. 435
Topic 15. Federation, its subjects 439
Topic 16. Legislative, executive and judicial authorities in the Russian Federation. 444
Topic 17. The Institute of the Presidency 454
Topic 18. Law enforcement agencies 458
Topic 19. International protection of human rights in peacetime and wartime. 463
Topic 20. Legal culture 468
Literature 475

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This book is tutorial for fast and effective preparation graduates of primary school for state (final) certification (GIA) in social studies, which in its content corresponds state standard main general education by subject. The manual is intended to assist in systematizing, deepening and generalizing knowledge on the content block of the social studies course “The Economic Sphere of Society.”

The express course presented in the first part of the manual, which reveals the content of this block, is adequate to the codifier of content elements in social studies, tested within the framework of the State Examination.

In the process of preparing for the State Examination in Social Studies, it is very important to transform the content of the material into something more accessible for perception, to identify the most significant features social facilities and phenomena, to reveal the essence of social science concepts, the most typical and significant features modern society, forms and directions of its development. The tools for accomplishing this task are structural and logical diagrams and tables that compactly reveal the most significant issues of the social science course of the basic school and contribute to the understanding and deep assimilation of the material.

The second part of the manual includes variable training tasks in preparation for the State Examination in Social Studies. These tasks correspond to control measuring materials (CMMs), on the basis of which the paperwork, which is a form of conducting the State Examination in Social Studies.

Structure exam paper in social studies

The training tasks are aimed at developing the skills tested as part of the examination work in social studies:

– recognize the essential features of concepts, characteristic features of a social object, elements of its description;

– define a concept, a social phenomenon based on its essential feature, proposed characteristics;

– recognize concepts and their components: correlate specific concepts with generic ones and eliminate unnecessary ones;

– compare social objects, identifying them common features and differences;

– give relevant examples of social phenomena, objects, human activities, situations regulated by various social norms;

– search for social information in various sources;

– evaluate various judgments about social objects from the point of view of social sciences;

– analyze, classify, interpret existing social information, correlate it with the knowledge acquired while studying the course;

– apply social science terms and concepts in the proposed context;

– apply social and humanitarian knowledge in the process of solving cognitive and practical problems that reflect actual problems human life and society;

– formulate your own judgments and arguments on certain problems based on acquired social and humanitarian knowledge;

– evaluate people’s behavior from the point of view of social norms.

Performance training tasks will allow you to test your knowledge, skills, and abilities, which will make it possible to more objectively assess the level of your social science training in the content block “Economic sphere of society.”

At the end of the manual, answers to all proposed tasks are presented. Check your answer against the standard. If your answer does not match the answer given in the manual, refer back to the contents of the task and try to understand what your mistake is.

To satisfy all the diverse needs, a person is forced to enter into “ business relationship" with other people. To satisfy his own needs, a person offers something of his own for others in exchange. In other words, everyone can satisfy their need only after they have satisfied someone else’s need.

Having received what he wants as a result of exchange on the market, a person carries out direct consumption, which temporarily satisfies him and gives rise to new needs. Satisfying one need leads to the formation of a new one. Human needs are limitless and growing all the time. Their growth constantly develops production. After all, it is only necessary to produce what a person needs. On the other hand, the development of production and technological changes in society not only expand the range of human desires and preferences, but also change the structure of his needs.

The guide includes material school course“Social studies”, which is tested on the unified state exam. The structure of the book corresponds to the Standard of Secondary (Complete) Education in the subject on the basis of which examination tasks are compiled - test and measuring materials (KIM) of the Unified State Examination.

The reference book presents the following sections of the course: “Society”, “Spiritual life of society”, “Man”, “Cognition”, “Politics”, “Economics”, “Social relations”, “Law”, which form the core of the content of public education tested within the framework of the Unified State Exam. This reinforces the practical focus of the book.

A compact and visual form of presentation, a large number of diagrams and tables contribute to a better understanding and memorization of theoretical material.

In the process of preparing for the social studies exam, it is very important not only to master the content of the course, but also to navigate the types of tasks on the basis of which written work, which is a form, is built conducting the Unified State Exam. Therefore, after each topic, assignment options with answers and comments are presented. These tasks are designed to form ideas about the form of testing and measuring materials in social studies, their level of complexity, the features of their implementation, and are aimed at developing skills tested within the framework of the Unified State Exam:

– recognize the signs of concepts, characteristic features of a social object, elements of its description;

– compare social objects, identifying their common features and differences;

– correlate social science knowledge with social realities that reflect them;

– evaluate various judgments about social objects from the point of view of social sciences;

– analyze and classify social information presented in various sign systems (diagram, table, diagram);

– recognize concepts and their components: correlate specific concepts with generic ones and eliminate unnecessary ones;

– establish correspondences between the essential features and characteristics of social phenomena and social scientific terms and concepts;

– apply knowledge about characteristic features, signs of concepts and phenomena, social objects of a certain class, selecting the necessary items from the proposed list;

– distinguish between facts and opinions, arguments and conclusions in social information;

– name terms and concepts, social phenomena corresponding to the proposed context, and apply social scientific terms and concepts in the proposed context;

– list the signs of a phenomenon, objects of the same class, etc.;

– reveal the most important ones using examples theoretical principles and concepts of social sciences and humanities; give examples of certain social phenomena, actions, situations;

– apply social and humanitarian knowledge in the process of solving cognitive and practical problems that reflect current problems of human life and society;

– carry out a comprehensive search, systematization and interpretation of social information on a specific topic from original non-adapted texts (philosophical, scientific, legal, political, journalistic);

– formulate your own judgments and arguments on certain problems based on acquired social and humanitarian knowledge.

This will allow you to overcome a certain psychological barrier before the exam, associated with the ignorance of the majority of examinees how they should formalize the result of the completed task.

Section 1.

Society

Topic 1. Society as a special part of the world. System structure of society

The complexity of defining the concept of “society” is associated primarily with its extreme generality, and in addition, with its enormous significance. This led to the presence of many definitions of this concept.

Concept "society" in a broad sense, the word can be defined as a part of the material world isolated from nature, but closely connected with it, which includes: ways of interaction between people; forms of unification of people.

Society in the narrow sense of the word is:

a circle of people united by a common goal, interests, origin(for example, a society of numismatists, a noble assembly);

individual specific society, country, state, region(for example, modern Russian society, French society);

historical stage in the development of humanity(eg feudal society, capitalist society);

humanity as a whole.

Society is the product of the combined activities of many people. Human activity is a way of existence or being of society. Society grows from itself life process, from the normal and daily activities of people. Not by chance Latin word socio means to unite, unite, undertake joint work. Society does not exist outside the direct and indirect interaction of people.

As a way of existence for people, society must fulfill a set of certain functions :

– production of material goods and services;

– distribution of labor products (activities);

– regulation and management of activities and behavior;

– human reproduction and socialization;

spiritual production and regulating people's activities.

The essence of society lies not in people themselves, but in the relationships they enter into with each other in the course of their life. Consequently, society is the totality of social relations.



Society is characterized as dynamic self-developing system , i.e. a system that is capable of seriously changing and at the same time maintaining its essence and qualitative certainty.

Wherein system defined as complex of interacting elements. In its turn, element called some further indecomposable component of the system that is directly involved in its creation.

Basic principles of the system : the whole is not reducible to the sum of its parts; the whole gives rise to traits, properties that go beyond the individual elements; the structure of the system is formed by the interrelation of its individual elements, subsystems; elements, in turn, can have a complex structure and act as systems; there is a relationship between the system and the environment.

Accordingly, society is complexly organized self-developing open system , which includes individuals and social communities, united by cooperative, coordinated connections and processes of self-regulation, self-structuring and self-reproduction.

To analyze complex systems similar to society, the concept of “subsystem” was developed. Subsystems called intermediate complexes, more complex than the elements, but less complex than the system itself.

Certain groups of social relations form subsystems. The main subsystems of society are considered to be the spheres public life basic spheres of public life .



The basis for delimiting spheres of public life are basic human needs.


The division into four spheres of public life is arbitrary. Other areas can be mentioned: science, artistic and creative activity, racial, ethnic, national relations. However, these four areas are traditionally identified as the most general and significant.

Society as a complex, self-developing system is characterized by the following specific features :

1. It is different variety of different social structures and subsystems. This is not a mechanical sum of individuals, but an integral system that has a highly complex and hierarchical character: various kinds of subsystems are connected by subordinate relationships.

2. Society is not reducible to the people who make it up; it is system of extra- and supra-individual forms, connections and relationships that a person creates through his active activities together with other people. These “invisible” social connections and relationships are given to people in their language, various actions, activity programs, communication, etc., without which people cannot exist together. Society is integrated in its essence and must be considered as a whole, in the totality of its individual components.

3. Society has self-sufficiency, i.e. the ability, through active joint activity, to create and reproduce the necessary conditions own existence. Society is characterized in this case as an integral, unified organism in which various social groups, a wide variety of activities that provide vital conditions for existence.

4. The society is exceptional dynamism, incompleteness and alternative development. The main character in choosing development options is a person.

5. Society highlights special status of subjects, determining its development. Man is a universal component of social systems, included in each of them. Behind the confrontation of ideas in society there is always a clash of corresponding needs, interests, goals, the impact of such social factors, such as public opinion, official ideology, political attitudes and traditions. Inevitable for social development is intense competition of interests and aspirations, and therefore, in society there is often a clash of alternative ideas, heated polemics and struggles take place.

6. Society has unpredictability, non-linear development. Presence in society large quantity subsystems, constant clash of interests and goals different people creates prerequisites for implementation different options and models of future development of society. However, this does not mean that the development of society is completely arbitrary and uncontrollable. On the contrary, scientists are creating social forecasting models: development options social system in its most varied fields, computer models peace, etc.


Sample assignment

A1. Choose the correct answer. Which feature characterizes society as a system?

1. constant development

2. part of the material world

3. isolation from nature

4. ways of interaction between people

Answer: 4.

Topic 2. Society and nature

Nature (from gr. physis and lat. natura - to arise, to be born) - one of the most general categories science and philosophy, originating in the ancient worldview.



The concept of “nature” is used to designate not only natural, but also the material conditions of its existence created by man – “second nature”, to one degree or another transformed and shaped by man.

Society, as a part of nature isolated in the process of human life, is inextricably linked with it.



The separation of man from the natural world marked the birth of a qualitatively new material unity, since man has not only natural properties, but also social.

Society has come into conflict with nature in two respects: 1) as a social reality, it is nothing other than nature itself; 2) it purposefully influences nature with the help of tools, changing it.

At first, the contradiction between society and nature acted as their difference, since man still had primitive tools with the help of which he obtained his means of living. However, in those distant times, man was no longer completely dependent on nature. As tools improved, society had an increasing impact on nature. Man cannot do without nature also because technical means, making his life easier, are created by analogy with natural processes.

As soon as it was born, society began to have a very significant impact on nature, sometimes improving it, and sometimes worsening it. But nature, in turn, began to “worse” the characteristics of society, for example, by reducing the quality of health of large masses of people, etc. Society, as an isolated part of nature, and nature itself have a significant influence on each other. At the same time, they retain specific features, which allow them to coexist as a dual phenomenon of earthly reality. This close relationship between nature and society lies the basis of the unity of the world.


Sample assignment

C6. Explain the relationship between nature and society using two examples.

Answer: Examples that reveal the relationship between nature and society include: Man is not only a social, but also a biological being, and therefore is part of living nature. From natural environment society draws the necessary material and energy resources for its development. Degradation of the natural environment (air pollution, water pollution, deforestation, etc.) leads to a deterioration in people’s health, a decrease in their quality of life, etc.

Topic 3. Society and culture

The entire life of society is based on the purposeful and varied activities of people, the product of which is material wealth and cultural values, i.e. culture. Therefore, individual types of societies are often called cultures. However, the concepts of “society” and “culture” are not synonymous.



The system of relationships is largely formed objectively, under the influence of the laws of social development. Therefore, they are not a direct product of culture, despite the fact that the conscious activity of people influences the nature and form of these relations in the most significant way.


Sample assignment

B5. Read the text below, each position of which is numbered.

(1) In the history of social thought, there have been various, often opposing points of view on culture. (2) Some philosophers called culture a means of enslaving people. (3) A different point of view was held by those scientists who considered culture a means of ennobling a person, turning him into a civilized member of society. (4) This speaks of the breadth and multidimensionality of the content of the concept of “culture”.

Determine which provisions of the text are:

A) factual nature

B) the nature of value judgments

Under the position number, write down the letter indicating its nature. Transfer the resulting sequence of letters to the answer form.



Answer: ABBA.

Topic 4. Interrelation of economic, social, political and spiritual spheres of society

Each sphere of social life is characterized by a certain independence; they function and develop according to the laws of the whole, that is, society. At the same time, all four main spheres not only interact, but also mutually determine each other. For example, the influence of the political sphere on culture is manifested in the fact that, firstly, each state pursues a certain policy in the field of culture, and secondly, cultural figures reflect certain political views and positions in their work.

The boundaries between all four spheres of society are easily crossed and transparent. Each sphere is present in one way or another in all the others, but at the same time does not dissolve, does not lose its leading function. The question of the relationship between the main spheres of public life and the allocation of one priority is debatable. There are supporters of the determining role of the economic sphere. They proceed from the fact that material production, which forms the core of economic relations, satisfies the most pressing, primary human needs, without which any other activity is impossible. The spiritual sphere of society's life is singled out as a priority. Proponents of this approach make the following argument: a person’s thoughts, ideas, and ideas are ahead of his practical actions. Major social changes are always preceded by changes in people's consciousness, a transition to other spiritual values. The most compromise of the above approaches is the approach whose adherents argue that each of the four spheres of social life can become decisive in different periods of historical development.


Sample assignment

B3. Establish a correspondence between the main spheres of society and their institutions (organizations): for each position given in the first column, select the corresponding position from the second column.



Write down the selected numbers in the table, and then transfer the resulting sequence of numbers to the answer form (without spaces or any symbols).



Answer: 21221.

Topic 5. Social institutions

Social Institute is a historically established, stable form of organizing the joint activities of people performing certain functions in society, the main one of which is meeting social needs.

Each social institution is characterized by the presence activity goals and specific functions ensuring its achievement.



In modern society, there are dozens of social institutions, among which the key ones can be identified: inheritance, power, property, family.

Within fundamental social institutions there are very distinct divisions into small institutions. For example, economic institutions, along with the basic institution of property, include many stable systems of relations - financial, production, marketing, organizational and management institutions. In the system of political institutions of modern society, along with the key institution of power, the institutions of political representation, presidency, separation of powers, local self-government, parliamentarism, etc. are distinguished.

Social institutions:

Organize human activity into a certain system of roles and statuses, establishing patterns of people’s behavior in various fields public life. For example, a social institution such as a school includes the roles of teacher and student, and a family includes the roles of parents and children. Certain role relationships develop between them, which are regulated by specific norms and regulations. Some of the most important norms are enshrined in law, others are supported by traditions, customs, and public opinion;

They include a system of sanctions - from legal to moral and ethical;

organize, coordinate many individual actions of people, give them an organized and predictable character;

Ensure standard behavior of people in socially typical situations.

Functions of social institutions: explicit (officially declared, recognized and controlled by society); hidden (performed hidden or unintentionally).

When the discrepancy between these functions is large, a double standard arises social relations, which threatens the stability of society. The situation is even more dangerous when, along with official institutions, so-called shadow institutions, which take on the function of regulating the most important social relations (for example, criminal structures).

Social institutions determine society as a whole. Any social transformations are carried out through changes in social institutions.

Each social institution is characterized by the presence of an activity goal and specific functions that ensure its achievement.


Sample assignment

C5. What meaning do social scientists give to the concept of “institutions of society”? Using knowledge from the social science course, compose two sentences containing information about the institutions of society.

Answer: The institution of society is a historically established, stable form of organizing the joint activities of people performing certain functions in society, the main one of which is the satisfaction of social needs. Examples of sentences: Economic, political, social institutions, and institutions operating in the spiritual field are distinguished. Each institution of society is characterized by the presence of an activity goal and specific functions. The institutions of society are a complex and branched formation: within the fundamental institutions there are very distinct divisions into smaller ones. From the point of view of the organization of society, the key institutions are: inheritance, power, property, family, etc.

Topic 6. Multivariate social development. Typology of societies

Social development can be reformist or revolutionary in nature.



Reforms can take place in all spheres of public life:

economic reforms– transformation of the economic mechanism: forms, methods, levers and organization of economic management of the country (privatization, bankruptcy law, antimonopoly laws, etc.);

social reforms– transformations, changes, reorganization of any aspects of social life that do not destroy the foundations of the social system (these reforms are directly related to people);

political reforms- changes in political sphere public life (changes in the constitution, electoral system, extension civil rights and so on.).

The degree of reformist changes can be very significant, up to changes social order or type of economic system: reforms of Peter I, reforms in Russia in the early 90s. XX century

In modern conditions, two paths of social development - reform and revolution - are opposed to the practice of permanent reform in a self-regulating society. It should be recognized that both reform and revolution “treat” an already advanced disease, while constant and possibly early prevention is necessary. Therefore, in modern social science, the emphasis is shifted from the “reform - revolution” dilemma to “reform - innovation”. Under innovation (from the English innovation - innovation, novelty, innovation) is understood an ordinary, one-time improvement associated with an increase in the adaptive capabilities of a social organism in given conditions.

In modern sociology social development associated with the modernization process.

Modernization (from the French moderniser – modern) – this is the process of transition from a traditional, agrarian society to modern, industrial societies. Classical theories modernizations described the so-called “primary” modernization, which historically coincided with the process of development of Western capitalism. Later theories of modernization characterize it through the concepts of “secondary” or “catch-up” modernization. It is carried out under the conditions of the existence of a “model”, for example in the form of the Western European liberal model; often such modernization is understood as Westernization, that is, a process of direct borrowing or imposition. In essence, this modernization is a worldwide process of replacing local, indigenous types of cultures and social organization with “universal” (Western) forms of modernity.