Apply Giddens' structuration theory to analyze the duality of structure — how social structures are both the medium and outcome of the practices they organize. Use this skill when the user needs to bridge agency and structure in organizational or social analysis, explain how routines reproduce or transform institutional patterns, analyze the recursive relationship between action and structure, or when they ask 'do people shape institutions or do institutions shape people', 'how are these routines maintained', or 'where does change come from if structures constrain action'.
Structuration theory, developed by Anthony Giddens (1984), resolves the agency-structure dualism by proposing that structure has a "duality" — it is simultaneously the medium through which action occurs and the outcome that action produces. Structure does not exist independently of practice; it is instantiated in the moment of action and reproduced (or transformed) through ongoing practice.
IRON LAW: Structure does not exist independent of action — it is
PRODUCED and REPRODUCED through practice. Any analysis that treats
structure as a fixed, external constraint separate from human activity
violates the duality of structure.
Key assumptions:
Select the recurring practice, routine, or pattern of interaction to analyze. Define the actors and the institutional context.
| Structural Dimension | Modality | Interaction Dimension |
|---|---|---|
| Signification (meaning systems) | Interpretive schemes | Communication |
| Domination (power relations) | Facility (resources) | Power |
| Legitimation (normative rules) | Norms | Sanction |
For each structural dimension, identify:
Evaluate the degree to which agents exercise reflexive monitoring, and identify moments where routine reproduction gives way to structural transformation.
## Structuration Analysis: [Context]
### Practice Under Analysis
- Practice: [the recurring social practice]
- Actors: [who performs it]
- Institutional setting: [context]
### Structural Decomposition
| Dimension | Structure (Rules/Resources) | Modality | Interaction |
|-----------|---------------------------|----------|-------------|
| Signification | [meaning systems in play] | [interpretive schemes] | [how actors communicate] |
| Domination | [allocative and authoritative resources] | [facilities enabling power] | [how power is exercised] |
| Legitimation | [norms and moral codes] | [normative expectations] | [how sanctions operate] |
### Duality of Structure
| Dimension | Structure as Medium | Structure as Outcome |
|-----------|--------------------|--------------------|
| Signification | [how meaning enables action] | [how action reproduces/changes meaning] |
| Domination | [how resources enable action] | [how action reproduces/changes power] |
| Legitimation | [how norms enable action] | [how action reproduces/changes norms] |
### Agency Assessment
- Discursive consciousness: [what actors can articulate about their practices]
- Practical consciousness: [what actors know tacitly but cannot articulate]
- Unintended consequences: [outcomes actors did not foresee]
### Reproduction vs. Transformation
- Reproduction mechanisms: [how routines maintain structure]
- Transformation potential: [where cracks, contradictions, or reflexive agency create change]