Social Stratification Ranking of individuals or categories of individuals on the basis of unequal...

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Social StratificationSocial Stratification

Ranking of individuals or categories of individuals on the basis of unequal access to scarce resources & social rewards

Social InequalitySocial Inequality

The unequal sharing of social rewards & resources

Why haven’t large ‘unstratified’ societies existed?

What criteria would you use to stratify a society if it were up to you?

How would you distribute scarce resources & social rewards?

CasteCaste

Distribute resources & rewards on ascribed ascribed characteristics

ClassClass

Distribute resources & rewards on achievedachieved characteristics

U.S.

Class system US law forbids discrimination based

on ascribed characteristics (race, sex, ethnicity, religion, etc.) Therefore, all Americans have equal access to resources needed for social advancement.

Does everyone have equal access?Does everyone have equal access?

Social ClassSocial Class

Grouping people with similar levels of wealth, power, and prestige

Upper, middle, lower

Wealth Made up of his or her assets (value of

belongings) and income (money earned through salary, returns, and gains)

In the US…

Wealth is concentrated in the hands of a small percent of the population.

-Richest 1% of population controls 1/3 of wealth

-Top 1/5th of income earners receive 50% of the national income

-Average executive makes 419x the average worker

Power

The ability to control the behaviors of others with or without their consent

Based on:

FORCE POSSESSION OF A SPECIAL SKILL

SOCIAL STATUS SPECIAL KNOWLEDGE

CUSTOMS PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS

Prestige

Respect, honor, recognition, or courtesy an individual receives from the other members of society

Income Occupation Education

Family Background Area of Residence

Possessions Club Memberships

SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS

Combines social factors such as educational level, occupational prestige, place of residence, and income

Prestige Ratings

On the next page in your packet, there are

20 occupations. By yourself, please rank

the occupations based on Prestige. There

are no right or wrong answers, just

opinions.

Explaining Stratification

Functionalist Theory Social Stratification is a necessary feature of

Social Structure

Certain roles must be performed in order to maintain society

Opposition to the Functionalist Theory

-Not everyone has equal access to education

-Unrecognized talent in lower classes

-Some rewards don’t reflect social values of the role

Explaining Stratification

Conflict Theory Competition over resources as the cause of

social inequality

Stratification comes from class exploitation

6 Classes

Upper-upper- UPPER CLASS Lower-upper- UPPER MIDDLE CLASS Upper-middle- LOWER MIDDLE CLASS Lower-middle- WORKING CLASS Upper-lower- WORKING POOR Lower-lower- UNDERCLASS

UPPER CLASS

1% of population Old money vs. New Money

-wealthy for gen. - Newly rich

-Family name - Not as respected

-Upper class holds power and influence

-Usually associated with Charity work and philanthropy

-Pay their dues to society

UPPER MIDDLE CLASS

High income businesspeople and professionals

Status based on income rather than assets

Have more influence in community

LOWER MIDDLE CLASS

White collar jobs (Do not require manual labor) Require less education and receive less

income Have comfortable life, but must work hard to

maintain traditional values

WORKING CLASS

Jobs require more manual labor Blue collar Factory workers, trades-people Don’t carry much prestige

Few financial reserves If emergencies happen…

WORKING POOR

Lowest paying jobs Often temporary or seasonal

Housecleaning, migrant farmers, day laborers

Barely make a living wage Depend on government assistance

UNDERCLASS

Families have been poor or unemployed for generations

Chief source of income is public assistance

50% of children make it to a higher class Life is a day to day struggle

3 ways to rank individuals3 ways to rank individuals

1. Reputational Indiv. In the community rank others

2. Subjective Indiv. rank themselves (middle)

3. Objective Sociologists define class based on

occupation, income & education