Sociological Argument Against The Dakota Pipeline

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The Dakota Pipeline is in the process of being built to connect the oil rich areas of North Dakota to Illinois. The hope of completing the pipeline, would make moving crude oil to the refineries in the Gulf Coast or East Coast areas a lot easier. President Obama, in November of 2015, put a stop to the pipeline being built because of the controversy that it caused (Yan, Park, Ravits and Sidner, 2017). By putting an end to the controversy about the construction of the pipeline, it put a stop to the disagreements, and protesting over the project that went on throughout most of Obama’s presidency (Yan, Park, Ravits and Sidner, 2017). On the 24th of January 2017, President Trump signed an executive order to finish the Dakota Pipeline; however, the pipeline would need to be in agreement with the law before it can be completed (Yan, Park, Ravits and Sidner, 2017). Since the signing of executive order, protesting about the pipeline has been an ongoing event.
The main protester against the Dakota Pipeline is a tribe known as the Standing Rock Sioux (Yan, Park, Ravits and Sidner, 2017). Their key concern is the pipeline being tunneled under Lake Oahe, which is a section
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Social control is being able to follow the rules or laws that are in place to help with keeping the peace (Crossman, 2016). Without having social control in our society, a society would not function properly due to some type of disorder and misunderstanding. We learn from the time we are born how to follow rules, how to behave, and interact with peers from those in the community and in are family (Crossman, 2016). When something goes wrong we are given warnings or disapproving looks from family members, peers, authority figures and other around us (Crossman, 2016). To understand social control, it requires understanding the two different kinds of social control informal and

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