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SOCIAL
STRATIFICATION
LEARNING OUTLINE
1. INTRODUCTION
• Definitions
• Origin
• Causes
• Characteristics
2. IMPACTS OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
3. FORMS OF STRATIFICATION
LEARNING OUTLINE
5. POVERTY
6. SOURCES OF STRATIFICATION
• Structural-Functionalist Perspectives
• Social conflict Perspectives
• Multidimensional Perspectives
7. MAINTAINING STRATIFICATION
8. SOCIAL MOBILITY
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
Social stratification is a term used in the social
sciences to describe:
 the relative social position of persons
 in a given social group, category, geographical
region or other social unit.
 It derives from the Latin stratum (plural strata;
parallel, horizontal layers)
 referring to a given society’s categorization of its
people into rankings of socioeconomic tiers
 based on factors like wealth, income, social
status, occupation and power.
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
 According Raymond W. Murray:
“Social Stratification is horizontal
division of society into ‘higher’ and
‘lower’ social units.”
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
 According to Gilbert:
“Social Stratification is the division
of society into permanent groups or
categories linked with each other by
the relationship of superiority and
subordination.”
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
 According to Kurt B. Mayer:
“Social Stratification is, a system of
differentiation which includes social
positions whose occupants are treated
as superior, equal or inferior relative to
one another in socially important
respect.”
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
 According to Lundberg:
“A stratified society is one marked
by inequality, by difference among
people that are evaluated by them
as being ‘lower’ and ‘higher’.
ORIGIN OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
 Hunting and Gathering Societies
 Horticultural, Pastoral, and Agricultural
Societies
 Division of Labor and Job Specialization
 Industrialized Societies
 The Improvement of Working Conditions
 Postindustrial Societies
CAUSES OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
There are five basic points which gives clear idea
about the causes of social stratification:
1. Inequality
2. Conflict
3. Power
4. Wealth
5. Instability
CHARACTERISTICS OF SOCIAL
STRATIFICATION
Social stratification may have the following
characteristics:
1. Social stratification is universal
2. Stratification is social
3. It is ancient
4. It is in diverse forms
5. Social stratification is Consequential
IMPACTS OF STRATIFICATION ON OUR LIFE
It leads to inequality regarding…
o Health sector.
o Education.
o Bounds individual actions.
o Specification of social roles.
o Societal laws.
o Whom will live or die.
HEALTH SECTOR
o Expensive health care facilities
o VIP culture
o Different treatment quality
o Discriminating attitude of care providers
o Unequal distribution of clean water and safe
environment in different zones of a city
EDUCATION
o Different Education Systems
o Specific methods of teaching
o Out dated syllabus
o Language Conflicts
o Leads to job discriminations
BOUNDS INDIVIDUAL ACTIONS
o Different Political Affiliation
o Limit our Opportunities to work
o Limit our Perceptive
o Stereotyping
o Labialization
o Stops one to ask question
SPECIFICATION OF SOCIAL ROLES
o Mother bound to care for children
o Preferred specific professions like doctors, engineers and
bankers etc.
o Father bound to be bread earner
o Child are bound to respect their elders and parent
SOCIETAL LAWS
o Punishment amplification
o Traffic rules
o Banks policies
o Discrimination in journalism
WHOM WILL LIVE OR DIE
o At time of flood protection of major cities
o In case of shortage of any basic food item
o In a case of protest lower political class political agents
actually suffer
For example :
Sinking titanic
FORMS OF STRATIFICATION
1. The Slavery System
2. The Estate System
3. The Caste System
4. The Class System
THE SLAVERY SYSTEM
“It is an extreme form of inequality in which some
individuals are owned by others as their property.”
L.T Hobhouse defined slave as a man whom law and
custom regard as the property of another. In extreme cases
he is wholly without rights. He is in lower condition as
compared with freemen. The slaves have no political rights
he does not choose his government, he does not attend the
public councils. Socially he is despised. He is compelled to
work.
EXAMPLE:
 Societies of the ancient world based upon slavery (Greek
and Roman) and southern states of USA in the 18th and
19th centuries.
 According to H.J Nieboer the basis of slavery is always
economic because with it emerged a kind of aristocracy
which lived upon slave labour.
THE ESTATE SYSTEM
“The estate system is synonymous with Feudalism”.
 Characteristics of Feudal Estate:
I. In the first place they were legally defined; each estate had a
status with legal rights and duties, privileges and
obligations.
II. Secondly the estates represented a broad division of labor
and were regarded as having definite functions. The nobility
were ordained to defend all, the clergy to pray for all and
the commons to provide food for all.
THE ESTATE SYSTEM
III. Thirdly the feudal estates were political groups. An
assembly of estates possessed political power.
o Thus the three estates clergy, nobility and
commoners functioned like three political groups.
THE CASTE SYSTEM
“ A person’s location in the social strata is ascribed by
birth rather than based on individual
accomplishments.”
The system is maintained through ,
• Endogamous Marriages:
Cultural rules requiring that
people marry only within their own group.
• Aparthied:
Laws that formalized strict racial
segregation.
THE CASTE SYSTEM
This system of stratification is mostly prominent in India
and the Hindu religion.
1. The Brahmins (priests/teachers/healers) From the most
pure
2. The Kshatriyas (soldiers/warriors)
3. The Vaishyas (traders/merchants)
4. The Shudras (servants/labourers)
5. The Untouchables (social outcastes/impure) To the least
pure.
THE CLASS SYSTEM
Industrial society gave rise to class based system of
stratification.
“It is based on a combination of ascribed and achieved
statuses.”
o Usually synonymous with socioeconomic status, which
is one's social position as determined by income, wealth,
occupational prestige, and educational attainment.
THE COMMON THREE-STRATUM
MODEL
 The upper class is the social class composed of those who are
wealthy, well-born, or both. They usually wield the greatest political
power.
 The middle class is the most contested of the three categories,
consisting of the broad group of people in contemporary society who
fall socioeconomically between the lower class and upper class.
Middle class workers are sometimes called white-collar workers.
THE COMMON THREE-STRATUM
MODEL
 The lower or working class is sometimes separated into
those who are employed as wage or hourly workers, and
an underclass—those who are long-term unemployed
and/or homeless, especially those receiving welfare
from the state. Members of the working class are
sometimes called blue-collar workers.
EXAMPLE
 The British aristocracy is an instance where wealth,
power, and prestige do not necessarily align — the
aristocracy is upper class and generally has
significant political influence, but members are not
necessarily wealthy.
Poverty
Discussions of income inequality are often conducted in
concert with discussions of poverty.
But what is poverty, and
who is poor?
In a stratified system in which resources are unequally
distributed, those having the least are the“poor.”
Poverty can be defined in absolute or relative terms.
“Those people living in families with an income below this poverty
threshold are considered “poor” by the government definition. These
thresholds vary by family size and composition. However, they are not
adjusted for variations in the cost of living across the nation.”
“Poverty threshold”
A snapshot of these
poverty threshold
Share of Aggregate Income among Households, Selected
Years 1967–2003
Cont’d
Cont’d
In 2003, the poverty
threshold for a family of four (consisting of two
adults and two children) was $18,660. By these
official definitions, 35.8 million Americans (or 12.5
percent) lived in poverty in 2003 (U.S. Census
Bureau 2004b).
Most people define poverty in non-numerical terms
based on their personal circumstances. They are
using a relative definition of poverty, measuring it
on the basis of whether their basic needs and wants
are met.
• Research has documented a number of hidden costs of being
poor.
• The poor pay more for many items.
• Rent-to-own arrangements
• These rent-to-own stores may charge lower payments for items,
but they have longer contracts.
• They may also be able to avoid legal problems from charging
high interest rates by replacing them with other fees and charges.
Breyer and Hudson
• Costs are also more than financial. The poor face a bigger time
squeeze than the affluent.
• They face trade-offs in demands between work and family life.
• This dilemma includes time to monitor their children’s educational
needs (e.g., supervised study time)
• Income and poverty are unequally distributed by such factors as
race and sex.
• Not all groups have an equivalent chance of being poor.
Heymann, Newman and Chin
• The median income for black and Hispanic households is lower
than the median income for white and Asian households.
• Racial and ethnic minorities are also disproportionately poor.
• The poverty rates for blacks and Hispanics is more than double
the rate for whites and Asians.
Poverty by race
Unequal distribution between Gender
(Figart and Lapidus)
• Income and poverty are also unequally distributed between males and
females.
• In 2003, women in the United States earned 80 cents for every dollar
earned by men.
• That was a record earning ratio (BLS 2004a).
• Even women in high-status positions earn less than their male
counterparts
• Recent decades have seen a feminization of poverty, an increase
in the proportion of the poor who are women.
• Increasing divorce rates and single-parent families headed by
women trying to care for children and support them on lower
incomes than men have contributed to this trend.
• These female-headed households are also disproportionately
poor, a situation that is compounded by race and ethnicity
Feminization of Poverty
Two of the major questions sociologists studying stratification
have tried to answer is why stratification exists and if it is
inevitable.
Sociologists working from the two major macro-theoretical
perspectives.
1. Structural-Functionalist Perspectives
2. Social-Conflict Perspectives
3. Multidimensional Perspectives
SOURCES OF STRATIFICATION
Perspective that in-equality serves a social function, sociologists
working in the structural-functionalist tradition have examined how
stratification contributes to the operation of society as a whole.
Kingsley Davis, profiled below, and Wilbert Moore (1945) offered an
early and controversial, but still influential, functionalist analysis of
stratification.
1. Structural-Functionalist Perspectives
Structural-Functionalist Perspectives
• They argue that some form of stratification is universal across all
societies. To operate smoothly, societies face a “motivational
problem” in ensuring that the best, most qualified people fill the most
important roles in society.
• By offering the greatest rewards to people who fill the most important
positions, Stratification is an “unconsciously evolved device by which
societies insure that the important positions are conscientiously filled
by the most qualified persons”
Davis and Moore
This perspective has been widely criticized (Tumin 1953, 1985).
Critics have charged that the Davis-Moore thesis implies that
individual attributes determine how people are located in society, and
that the most talented earn their positions through their hard work
and merits.
This idea disregards the impact of social factors such as
discrimination that are outside of individual control.
It does not give appropriate attention to the tensions and
divisiveness that can arise as a result of inequality.
Critics
For example, hard feeling may result among those who work hard
yet are treated unfairly or feel they are not properly rewarded for
their efforts.
Example
Sociologist Herbert Gans (2001), analyzed the functions of poverty.
• He described 13 functions the poor play in society.
• The poor ensure that society’s “dirty work” gets done, their
existence creates jobs that serve the poor
• (e.g., social-service workers, shelter providers), and the poor buy
goods others do not want (e.g., day-old bread, used clothing and
vehicles).
• The poor also absorb the costs of social change
Herbert Gans
Gans says that his analysis does not mean that poverty must, or should,
Exist
• He argues that a “functional analysis must conclude that poverty
persists not only because it fulfills a number of positive functions
but also because many of the functional alternatives to poverty
would be quite dysfunctional for the affluent members of society”
• He also uses his analysis to show that functionalism, accused by
critics of being inherently conservative, can be used in more liberal
and radical analyses.
Cont’d
STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM:
Emile Durkheim:
(1858-1917)
STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM:
“This perspective views society as a
complex system of interrelated parts that
work together to maintain stability.”
According to this perspective:
Social system’s parts are interdependent.
System has a normal healthy state of
equilibrium.
When disturbed parts reorganize them.
FUNCTIOALISM ACCORDING
TO STRATIFICATION:
Kingsley Davis & Wilbert Moore:
“Stratification is an unconsciously evolved
device by which societies ensure that the
important positions are filled
conscientiously by the most qualified
persons.’’
CRITICISM:
This idea disregards the impacts of social
factors such as discrimination that are
outside one’s control
Disregards those who inherit wealth and
positions.
Disregard ability of those who have
higher status.
Most highly rewarded positions do not
always fill the most important roles in
society.
It does not account for disparity between
poor and rich.
FUNCTIONS OF POVERTY:
Dirty work
Create jobs
Buy goods others don’t want
Guarantee status of wealthy ones
Absorb costs of social change
‘’Functional analysis must conclude That
poverty persists not because it fulfills a
number of positive functions but because
many of the functional alternatives to
poverty would be quite dysfunctional for for
other affluent members of society’’
SOCIAL CONFLICT
PERSECTIVE:
Focuses on tensions in societies.
CAUSES:
Limited resources
Conflict between groups
ACCORDING TO
STRATIFICATION:
Karl Marx:
SOCIAL CLASSES:
‘’Positions based on the unequal locations
of people within economic groups’’
BOURGEOISIE / HAVES:
‘’ who own factories, industrial machinery
and banks’’
PROLETRAIT/ HAVE NOTS:
‘’ The factory workers who actually work to
produce these products’’
CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS:
‘’A recognition of themselves as a social
class with interests opposed to the
bourgeoisie’’
CRITICISM:
Did not predict the rise of middle class
Inequality persists and increases.
MULTIDIMENSIONAL PERSPECTIVE
 Max Weber developed a more complex view of
social stratification than Marx’s view of
economically based classes.
 Weber developed three interrelated dimensions of
stratification:
1. Class
2. Status
3. Power
MAINTAINING STRATIFICATION
Stratification is influenced by ascribed statuses such
as race, ethnic background, gender and age. We are
born with these statuses and despite our personal
efforts and achievements, they impact our lifestyle
and life chances. Prejudices and Discrimination
based on these ascribed statuses serve to justify and
maintain systems of stratification.
“Prejudice is a preconceived and irrational attitude
toward people based on their group membership.”
It is inflexible and not based on direct evidence or
contact. Prejudices can take the form of positive or
negative attitudes toward a group, but the term often
used with a negative connotation.
EUGENE HARTLEY
 Express the reaction to various minorities groups
 Prejudice against actual racial and ethnic groups
 Prejudicial attitudes against fictitious groups
Common and damaging forms of prejudice are found
in the “isms” that exist throughout society. For
example racism, sexism, ageism. All of these
“isms” take the form of a belief that one group is
naturally inferior or superior, that justifying unequal
treatment of the group on the basis of their assumed
characteristics.
 In racism, that belief is based on racial or ethnic
group membership.
 Sexism is the belief that one sex is naturally inferior
or superior, thereby justifying unequal treatment.
Feminist sociologists focus on sexism.
 Ageism takes the form of prejudice against the
elderly.
Other “isms” include ableism (prejudice against the
disabled) and heterosexism (prejudice toward
homosexuals).
These “isms” reinforce and are reinforced by,
another common and potentially destructive form of
prejudice that is stereotypes. Stereotypes are beliefs
that generalize certain exaggerated traits to an entire
category of people.
DISCRIMINATION
Discrimination, unequal treatment of people based
on their group membership, also perpetuates
stratification.
Prejudice is an attitude; discrimination is a behavior.
Although the two may, and often do, occur together,
they can also exist separately.
INSTITUTIONAL DISCRIMINATION
“When discrimination becomes part of the operation
of social institution.”
It perpetuates stratification patterns by systematically
disadvantaging certain groups.
According to Joe Feagin and Melvin Sikes, racism is
still alive and well, although less overt than in the
past. However institutional racism is rampant.
These ascribed factors require a multidimensional
approach to stratification . They can have multiple,
interrelated effects. Stratification also applies to many
more social factors than race, ethnicity, gender and
age. We are also ranked to varying degrees by other
factors such as religious affiliation and sexual
preference.
Some sociologists are also starting to explore
stratification and oppression regarding animals, just
as they have long studied the impact of stratification
and oppression of the poor, women and minorities.
Sociologists added another “isms” to the sociological
vocabulary with the term speciesism, (a belief in the
superiority of humans over other species of animals).
They cite examples such as food industries that rely
on animals bred and raised under poor conditions,
experimentation on animals, and the use of animals
in circuses and rodeos.
SOCIAL MOBILITY
SOCIAL MOBILITY
 Social mobility is the movement of individuals, families,
households or other categories of people within or
between social strata in a society.
 It is a change in social status relative to others social
location within a given society.
HORIZONTAL MOBILITY
 If mobility involves a change in position, especially in
occupation, but no change in social class, it is called
“horizontal mobility”.
 EXAMPLE
A person who moves from a managerial position in
one company to a similar position in another.
VERTICAL MOBILITY
If, however, the move involves a change in social
class, it is called “vertical mobility” and involves
either “upward mobility” or “downward mobility”.
EXAMPLE
 An industrial worker who becomes a wealthy
businessman moves upward in the class system, a
landed aristocrat who loses everything in a
revolution moves downward in the system.
TYPES OF MOBILITY
Mobility can be examined by how much time it takes to
occur:
 Intragenerational mobility
 Intergenerational mobility
Mobility can also be examined by the factors behind
the change:
 Structural mobility
 Positional mobility
INTRAGENERATIONAL MOBILITY
 Intragenerational mobility is movement that occurs
within the lifetime of an individual.
 EXAMPLE
When a child rises above the class of his or her parents. An
employee that starts in the mail room and becomes
corporate vice president.
INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY
 Intergenerational mobility is the movement that occurs
from generation to generation.
 EXAMPLE
When individual changes class because of business
success. The mail-rom clerk’s son becomes the corporate
officer.
STRUCTURAL MOBILITY
 Mobility that occurs as a result of changes in the occupational
structure of a society is structural mobility.
 EXAMPLE
The dot-com businesses that arose with the growth of the
internet provided new, often high paying employment
opportunities during the late 1990s. When the dot-com bust
came at the end of the decade the occupational structure once
again changed , and many workers lost their jobs.
POSITIONAL MOBILITY
 Positional mobility is movement that occurs due to
individual effort.
 EXAMPLE
Hard work, winning the lottery.
FACTORS THAT LIMIT
MOBILITY
 RACISM:
Racism is a factor that has a huge,
limiting impact on mobility and achievement.
 CLASS :
Class is a more important factor that race in
limiting social mobility.
 Poor job training
 Little opportunity to obtain education
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socialstratification-170211122810.pdf

  • 2. LEARNING OUTLINE 1. INTRODUCTION • Definitions • Origin • Causes • Characteristics 2. IMPACTS OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION 3. FORMS OF STRATIFICATION
  • 3. LEARNING OUTLINE 5. POVERTY 6. SOURCES OF STRATIFICATION • Structural-Functionalist Perspectives • Social conflict Perspectives • Multidimensional Perspectives 7. MAINTAINING STRATIFICATION 8. SOCIAL MOBILITY
  • 4. SOCIAL STRATIFICATION Social stratification is a term used in the social sciences to describe:  the relative social position of persons  in a given social group, category, geographical region or other social unit.  It derives from the Latin stratum (plural strata; parallel, horizontal layers)  referring to a given society’s categorization of its people into rankings of socioeconomic tiers  based on factors like wealth, income, social status, occupation and power.
  • 5. SOCIAL STRATIFICATION  According Raymond W. Murray: “Social Stratification is horizontal division of society into ‘higher’ and ‘lower’ social units.”
  • 6. SOCIAL STRATIFICATION  According to Gilbert: “Social Stratification is the division of society into permanent groups or categories linked with each other by the relationship of superiority and subordination.”
  • 7. SOCIAL STRATIFICATION  According to Kurt B. Mayer: “Social Stratification is, a system of differentiation which includes social positions whose occupants are treated as superior, equal or inferior relative to one another in socially important respect.”
  • 8. SOCIAL STRATIFICATION  According to Lundberg: “A stratified society is one marked by inequality, by difference among people that are evaluated by them as being ‘lower’ and ‘higher’.
  • 9. ORIGIN OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION  Hunting and Gathering Societies  Horticultural, Pastoral, and Agricultural Societies  Division of Labor and Job Specialization  Industrialized Societies  The Improvement of Working Conditions  Postindustrial Societies
  • 10. CAUSES OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION There are five basic points which gives clear idea about the causes of social stratification: 1. Inequality 2. Conflict 3. Power 4. Wealth 5. Instability
  • 11. CHARACTERISTICS OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION Social stratification may have the following characteristics: 1. Social stratification is universal 2. Stratification is social 3. It is ancient 4. It is in diverse forms 5. Social stratification is Consequential
  • 12. IMPACTS OF STRATIFICATION ON OUR LIFE It leads to inequality regarding… o Health sector. o Education. o Bounds individual actions. o Specification of social roles. o Societal laws. o Whom will live or die.
  • 13. HEALTH SECTOR o Expensive health care facilities o VIP culture o Different treatment quality o Discriminating attitude of care providers o Unequal distribution of clean water and safe environment in different zones of a city
  • 14. EDUCATION o Different Education Systems o Specific methods of teaching o Out dated syllabus o Language Conflicts o Leads to job discriminations
  • 15. BOUNDS INDIVIDUAL ACTIONS o Different Political Affiliation o Limit our Opportunities to work o Limit our Perceptive o Stereotyping o Labialization o Stops one to ask question
  • 16. SPECIFICATION OF SOCIAL ROLES o Mother bound to care for children o Preferred specific professions like doctors, engineers and bankers etc. o Father bound to be bread earner o Child are bound to respect their elders and parent
  • 17. SOCIETAL LAWS o Punishment amplification o Traffic rules o Banks policies o Discrimination in journalism
  • 18. WHOM WILL LIVE OR DIE o At time of flood protection of major cities o In case of shortage of any basic food item o In a case of protest lower political class political agents actually suffer For example : Sinking titanic
  • 19. FORMS OF STRATIFICATION 1. The Slavery System 2. The Estate System 3. The Caste System 4. The Class System
  • 20. THE SLAVERY SYSTEM “It is an extreme form of inequality in which some individuals are owned by others as their property.” L.T Hobhouse defined slave as a man whom law and custom regard as the property of another. In extreme cases he is wholly without rights. He is in lower condition as compared with freemen. The slaves have no political rights he does not choose his government, he does not attend the public councils. Socially he is despised. He is compelled to work.
  • 21. EXAMPLE:  Societies of the ancient world based upon slavery (Greek and Roman) and southern states of USA in the 18th and 19th centuries.  According to H.J Nieboer the basis of slavery is always economic because with it emerged a kind of aristocracy which lived upon slave labour.
  • 22. THE ESTATE SYSTEM “The estate system is synonymous with Feudalism”.  Characteristics of Feudal Estate: I. In the first place they were legally defined; each estate had a status with legal rights and duties, privileges and obligations. II. Secondly the estates represented a broad division of labor and were regarded as having definite functions. The nobility were ordained to defend all, the clergy to pray for all and the commons to provide food for all.
  • 23. THE ESTATE SYSTEM III. Thirdly the feudal estates were political groups. An assembly of estates possessed political power. o Thus the three estates clergy, nobility and commoners functioned like three political groups.
  • 24. THE CASTE SYSTEM “ A person’s location in the social strata is ascribed by birth rather than based on individual accomplishments.” The system is maintained through , • Endogamous Marriages: Cultural rules requiring that people marry only within their own group. • Aparthied: Laws that formalized strict racial segregation.
  • 25. THE CASTE SYSTEM This system of stratification is mostly prominent in India and the Hindu religion. 1. The Brahmins (priests/teachers/healers) From the most pure 2. The Kshatriyas (soldiers/warriors) 3. The Vaishyas (traders/merchants) 4. The Shudras (servants/labourers) 5. The Untouchables (social outcastes/impure) To the least pure.
  • 26. THE CLASS SYSTEM Industrial society gave rise to class based system of stratification. “It is based on a combination of ascribed and achieved statuses.” o Usually synonymous with socioeconomic status, which is one's social position as determined by income, wealth, occupational prestige, and educational attainment.
  • 27. THE COMMON THREE-STRATUM MODEL  The upper class is the social class composed of those who are wealthy, well-born, or both. They usually wield the greatest political power.  The middle class is the most contested of the three categories, consisting of the broad group of people in contemporary society who fall socioeconomically between the lower class and upper class. Middle class workers are sometimes called white-collar workers.
  • 28. THE COMMON THREE-STRATUM MODEL  The lower or working class is sometimes separated into those who are employed as wage or hourly workers, and an underclass—those who are long-term unemployed and/or homeless, especially those receiving welfare from the state. Members of the working class are sometimes called blue-collar workers.
  • 29. EXAMPLE  The British aristocracy is an instance where wealth, power, and prestige do not necessarily align — the aristocracy is upper class and generally has significant political influence, but members are not necessarily wealthy.
  • 30. Poverty Discussions of income inequality are often conducted in concert with discussions of poverty. But what is poverty, and who is poor? In a stratified system in which resources are unequally distributed, those having the least are the“poor.”
  • 31. Poverty can be defined in absolute or relative terms. “Those people living in families with an income below this poverty threshold are considered “poor” by the government definition. These thresholds vary by family size and composition. However, they are not adjusted for variations in the cost of living across the nation.” “Poverty threshold”
  • 32. A snapshot of these poverty threshold Share of Aggregate Income among Households, Selected Years 1967–2003
  • 34. Cont’d In 2003, the poverty threshold for a family of four (consisting of two adults and two children) was $18,660. By these official definitions, 35.8 million Americans (or 12.5 percent) lived in poverty in 2003 (U.S. Census Bureau 2004b). Most people define poverty in non-numerical terms based on their personal circumstances. They are using a relative definition of poverty, measuring it on the basis of whether their basic needs and wants are met.
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37. • Research has documented a number of hidden costs of being poor. • The poor pay more for many items. • Rent-to-own arrangements • These rent-to-own stores may charge lower payments for items, but they have longer contracts. • They may also be able to avoid legal problems from charging high interest rates by replacing them with other fees and charges. Breyer and Hudson
  • 38. • Costs are also more than financial. The poor face a bigger time squeeze than the affluent. • They face trade-offs in demands between work and family life. • This dilemma includes time to monitor their children’s educational needs (e.g., supervised study time) • Income and poverty are unequally distributed by such factors as race and sex. • Not all groups have an equivalent chance of being poor. Heymann, Newman and Chin
  • 39.
  • 40. • The median income for black and Hispanic households is lower than the median income for white and Asian households. • Racial and ethnic minorities are also disproportionately poor. • The poverty rates for blacks and Hispanics is more than double the rate for whites and Asians. Poverty by race
  • 41. Unequal distribution between Gender (Figart and Lapidus) • Income and poverty are also unequally distributed between males and females. • In 2003, women in the United States earned 80 cents for every dollar earned by men. • That was a record earning ratio (BLS 2004a). • Even women in high-status positions earn less than their male counterparts
  • 42. • Recent decades have seen a feminization of poverty, an increase in the proportion of the poor who are women. • Increasing divorce rates and single-parent families headed by women trying to care for children and support them on lower incomes than men have contributed to this trend. • These female-headed households are also disproportionately poor, a situation that is compounded by race and ethnicity Feminization of Poverty
  • 43. Two of the major questions sociologists studying stratification have tried to answer is why stratification exists and if it is inevitable. Sociologists working from the two major macro-theoretical perspectives. 1. Structural-Functionalist Perspectives 2. Social-Conflict Perspectives 3. Multidimensional Perspectives SOURCES OF STRATIFICATION
  • 44. Perspective that in-equality serves a social function, sociologists working in the structural-functionalist tradition have examined how stratification contributes to the operation of society as a whole. Kingsley Davis, profiled below, and Wilbert Moore (1945) offered an early and controversial, but still influential, functionalist analysis of stratification. 1. Structural-Functionalist Perspectives
  • 46. • They argue that some form of stratification is universal across all societies. To operate smoothly, societies face a “motivational problem” in ensuring that the best, most qualified people fill the most important roles in society. • By offering the greatest rewards to people who fill the most important positions, Stratification is an “unconsciously evolved device by which societies insure that the important positions are conscientiously filled by the most qualified persons” Davis and Moore
  • 47. This perspective has been widely criticized (Tumin 1953, 1985). Critics have charged that the Davis-Moore thesis implies that individual attributes determine how people are located in society, and that the most talented earn their positions through their hard work and merits. This idea disregards the impact of social factors such as discrimination that are outside of individual control. It does not give appropriate attention to the tensions and divisiveness that can arise as a result of inequality. Critics
  • 48. For example, hard feeling may result among those who work hard yet are treated unfairly or feel they are not properly rewarded for their efforts. Example
  • 49. Sociologist Herbert Gans (2001), analyzed the functions of poverty. • He described 13 functions the poor play in society. • The poor ensure that society’s “dirty work” gets done, their existence creates jobs that serve the poor • (e.g., social-service workers, shelter providers), and the poor buy goods others do not want (e.g., day-old bread, used clothing and vehicles). • The poor also absorb the costs of social change Herbert Gans
  • 50. Gans says that his analysis does not mean that poverty must, or should, Exist • He argues that a “functional analysis must conclude that poverty persists not only because it fulfills a number of positive functions but also because many of the functional alternatives to poverty would be quite dysfunctional for the affluent members of society” • He also uses his analysis to show that functionalism, accused by critics of being inherently conservative, can be used in more liberal and radical analyses. Cont’d
  • 51. STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM: Emile Durkheim: (1858-1917) STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM: “This perspective views society as a complex system of interrelated parts that work together to maintain stability.”
  • 52. According to this perspective: Social system’s parts are interdependent. System has a normal healthy state of equilibrium. When disturbed parts reorganize them.
  • 53. FUNCTIOALISM ACCORDING TO STRATIFICATION: Kingsley Davis & Wilbert Moore: “Stratification is an unconsciously evolved device by which societies ensure that the important positions are filled conscientiously by the most qualified persons.’’
  • 54. CRITICISM: This idea disregards the impacts of social factors such as discrimination that are outside one’s control Disregards those who inherit wealth and positions. Disregard ability of those who have higher status.
  • 55. Most highly rewarded positions do not always fill the most important roles in society. It does not account for disparity between poor and rich.
  • 56. FUNCTIONS OF POVERTY: Dirty work Create jobs Buy goods others don’t want Guarantee status of wealthy ones Absorb costs of social change
  • 57. ‘’Functional analysis must conclude That poverty persists not because it fulfills a number of positive functions but because many of the functional alternatives to poverty would be quite dysfunctional for for other affluent members of society’’
  • 58. SOCIAL CONFLICT PERSECTIVE: Focuses on tensions in societies. CAUSES: Limited resources Conflict between groups
  • 59. ACCORDING TO STRATIFICATION: Karl Marx: SOCIAL CLASSES: ‘’Positions based on the unequal locations of people within economic groups’’ BOURGEOISIE / HAVES: ‘’ who own factories, industrial machinery and banks’’
  • 60. PROLETRAIT/ HAVE NOTS: ‘’ The factory workers who actually work to produce these products’’ CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS: ‘’A recognition of themselves as a social class with interests opposed to the bourgeoisie’’
  • 61. CRITICISM: Did not predict the rise of middle class Inequality persists and increases.
  • 62. MULTIDIMENSIONAL PERSPECTIVE  Max Weber developed a more complex view of social stratification than Marx’s view of economically based classes.  Weber developed three interrelated dimensions of stratification: 1. Class 2. Status 3. Power
  • 63. MAINTAINING STRATIFICATION Stratification is influenced by ascribed statuses such as race, ethnic background, gender and age. We are born with these statuses and despite our personal efforts and achievements, they impact our lifestyle and life chances. Prejudices and Discrimination based on these ascribed statuses serve to justify and maintain systems of stratification.
  • 64. “Prejudice is a preconceived and irrational attitude toward people based on their group membership.” It is inflexible and not based on direct evidence or contact. Prejudices can take the form of positive or negative attitudes toward a group, but the term often used with a negative connotation.
  • 65. EUGENE HARTLEY  Express the reaction to various minorities groups  Prejudice against actual racial and ethnic groups  Prejudicial attitudes against fictitious groups
  • 66. Common and damaging forms of prejudice are found in the “isms” that exist throughout society. For example racism, sexism, ageism. All of these “isms” take the form of a belief that one group is naturally inferior or superior, that justifying unequal treatment of the group on the basis of their assumed characteristics.
  • 67.  In racism, that belief is based on racial or ethnic group membership.  Sexism is the belief that one sex is naturally inferior or superior, thereby justifying unequal treatment. Feminist sociologists focus on sexism.  Ageism takes the form of prejudice against the elderly.
  • 68. Other “isms” include ableism (prejudice against the disabled) and heterosexism (prejudice toward homosexuals). These “isms” reinforce and are reinforced by, another common and potentially destructive form of prejudice that is stereotypes. Stereotypes are beliefs that generalize certain exaggerated traits to an entire category of people.
  • 69. DISCRIMINATION Discrimination, unequal treatment of people based on their group membership, also perpetuates stratification. Prejudice is an attitude; discrimination is a behavior. Although the two may, and often do, occur together, they can also exist separately.
  • 70. INSTITUTIONAL DISCRIMINATION “When discrimination becomes part of the operation of social institution.” It perpetuates stratification patterns by systematically disadvantaging certain groups. According to Joe Feagin and Melvin Sikes, racism is still alive and well, although less overt than in the past. However institutional racism is rampant.
  • 71. These ascribed factors require a multidimensional approach to stratification . They can have multiple, interrelated effects. Stratification also applies to many more social factors than race, ethnicity, gender and age. We are also ranked to varying degrees by other factors such as religious affiliation and sexual preference.
  • 72. Some sociologists are also starting to explore stratification and oppression regarding animals, just as they have long studied the impact of stratification and oppression of the poor, women and minorities.
  • 73. Sociologists added another “isms” to the sociological vocabulary with the term speciesism, (a belief in the superiority of humans over other species of animals). They cite examples such as food industries that rely on animals bred and raised under poor conditions, experimentation on animals, and the use of animals in circuses and rodeos.
  • 75. SOCIAL MOBILITY  Social mobility is the movement of individuals, families, households or other categories of people within or between social strata in a society.  It is a change in social status relative to others social location within a given society.
  • 76. HORIZONTAL MOBILITY  If mobility involves a change in position, especially in occupation, but no change in social class, it is called “horizontal mobility”.  EXAMPLE A person who moves from a managerial position in one company to a similar position in another.
  • 77. VERTICAL MOBILITY If, however, the move involves a change in social class, it is called “vertical mobility” and involves either “upward mobility” or “downward mobility”. EXAMPLE  An industrial worker who becomes a wealthy businessman moves upward in the class system, a landed aristocrat who loses everything in a revolution moves downward in the system.
  • 78. TYPES OF MOBILITY Mobility can be examined by how much time it takes to occur:  Intragenerational mobility  Intergenerational mobility Mobility can also be examined by the factors behind the change:  Structural mobility  Positional mobility
  • 79. INTRAGENERATIONAL MOBILITY  Intragenerational mobility is movement that occurs within the lifetime of an individual.  EXAMPLE When a child rises above the class of his or her parents. An employee that starts in the mail room and becomes corporate vice president.
  • 80. INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY  Intergenerational mobility is the movement that occurs from generation to generation.  EXAMPLE When individual changes class because of business success. The mail-rom clerk’s son becomes the corporate officer.
  • 81. STRUCTURAL MOBILITY  Mobility that occurs as a result of changes in the occupational structure of a society is structural mobility.  EXAMPLE The dot-com businesses that arose with the growth of the internet provided new, often high paying employment opportunities during the late 1990s. When the dot-com bust came at the end of the decade the occupational structure once again changed , and many workers lost their jobs.
  • 82. POSITIONAL MOBILITY  Positional mobility is movement that occurs due to individual effort.  EXAMPLE Hard work, winning the lottery.
  • 83. FACTORS THAT LIMIT MOBILITY  RACISM: Racism is a factor that has a huge, limiting impact on mobility and achievement.  CLASS : Class is a more important factor that race in limiting social mobility.  Poor job training  Little opportunity to obtain education