%0 Journal Article %T From Simulation Model to Critique of Structuration %A Sean Downey %J Structure and Dynamics : e-Journal of Anthropological and Related Sciences %D 2006 %I University of California %X In this paper I use a simulation model of Learning to Labor (Willis 1981) to critique Giddens¡¯ structuration theory (Giddens 1984). The simulation model represents interactions between a group of non-conformist boys from Birmingham, England and an industrial capitalist business. I present the results of three simulation experiments designed to test the limits of structuration theory by exploring when decision-making based in cultural meaning conflicts with structural power and when it reproduces structural power. Tests explore how different non-conformist cultural values affect the economic system, and the cultural and economic conditions under which non-conformists may be more likely to reject their structural positions. Based on these results, I argue that structuration theory does not adequately explain how social structures arise because it does not account for interactions among agents and how analysis of these interactions may lead to a better understanding of the emergence of structures of power. I conclude by suggesting that the results of the research support Archer¡¯s critique of structuration theory and Foucault¡¯s admonition to avoid ¡°theories of power.¡± %K Agency %K Power %K Structuration %K Simulation %U http://repositories.cdlib.org/imbs/socdyn/sdeas/vol1/iss2/art1/