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Social Stratification. Social Status. ‘Everyday’ meaning: Prestige Sociological meaning: Position a person occupies Status Set: All the statuses or positions a person occupies. Social Status. Ascribed Status: Involuntary position Achieved Status: Voluntary position you earn or accomplish
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Social Status • ‘Everyday’ meaning: Prestige • Sociological meaning: Position a person occupies • Status Set: All the statuses or positions a person occupies
Social Status • Ascribed Status: Involuntary position • Achieved Status: Voluntary position you earn or accomplish • Status provides guidelines for how we are to act and feel
Social Status • Status symbols: Signs that identify a status, allow others to recognize status • Master Statuses: Cuts across other statuses one holds, such as age, gender
Roles • Behaviors, obligations, privileges attached to a status • Role exit
Cultural Roles • Age roles • Occupational roles • Friendship roles • Gender roles
Social Stratification • Division of society into layers (strata) • Occupants of different social strata have unequal access to social opportunities and rewards
Social Class • Group of individuals who occupy similar social statuses • Includes educational level, occupation, political influence, economic position
Structure of Stratification • Closed system • Position in social hierarchy is ascribed
Structure of Stratification • Closed system • Position in social hierarchy is ascribed
Structure of Stratification • Closed system • Position in social hierarchy is ascribed
Structure of Stratification • Open system • Position in social hierarchy is achieved • Social mobility is possible
Structure of Stratification • Functionalist perspective: • Complex societies depend on individuals occupying a variety of positions • Societies develop systems of unequal rewards • Meritocracy: • Position in social hierarchy is determined by individual merit • Based on equality of opportunity, not equality of outcome
Social Mobility • Movement up or down socioeconomic ladder • Upward Mobility: • Better off than one’s parents • Better off than one used to be in a lifetime • Downward Mobility: • Worse off than one’s parents • Worse off than one once was
Social Mobility • Movement up or down socioeconomic ladder • Structural Mobility: • Structural changes in society ‘push’ and ‘pull’ people into higher and lower social levels
The American Class System Capitalist Class Upper Middle Class Middle Class Working Class Working Poor Underclass
Distribution of Wealth and Income • Income: • Money people earn from wages/salaries, interest, investments, etc. • Wealth: • Things people own; assets (stocks, real estate, savings bonds, cars, consumer goods)
Deindustrialization • Shift from economy based on manufacturing to an economy based on information and service • Globalization • Technology
Poverty in America • 1995: Over 36 million Americans (almost 14% of our population) officially poor • Poverty line: Governmental estimate of minimum budget for families of different sizes • 2003: $18,400 for a family of 4
Poverty in America • Who are the poor? • For most, poverty is a temporary condition • Non-Latino whites: 48% • Single moms living alone: 37% • Majority of poor live in suburbs, small towns, and rural areas (58%) • Proportion of children who are poor has climbed (now about 20%)
The Ghetto Poor • Ghetto originally used to describe an urban neighborhood of a minority segregated from rest of the city • Now commonly used to describe poor, deteriorating, inner-city neighborhoods
Explaining Ghetto Poverty • ‘Underclass’ explanation: • Acute, chronic poverty • Culture of poverty: No work ethic, no family values, no respect for law and order
Explaining Ghetto Poverty • William Julius Wilson: • Ghetto poverty a result of the combination of • Joblessness due to deindustrialization • Social isolation
Explaining Ghetto Poverty • Christopher Jencks: • Questions the existence of special category of poor as ‘ghetto poor’ • Assuming these problems are linked together perpetuates stereotypes • This excuses inaction
The Impact of Poverty • Poor women less likely to seek prenatal care • More health problems • Hit harder with increased prices of consumer goods • More likely to be arrested for committing crime; more likely to be victims of crime
Global Stratification • Most industrialized nations • Industrializing nations • Least industrialized nations
Theories of Global Stratification • Colonialism • Industrial nations use technology, military power to exploit labor, resources of weaker nations
Theories of Global Stratification • Dependency Theory • Poverty in poor nations the result of exploitation by wealthy nations • Related to colonialism—Colonies were encouraged to develop one or two prime exports
Theories of Global Stratification • World System Theory • World economic system must be seen as a unit • Core countries • Semiperipheral countries • Peripheral countries