Introduction (Definitions)
When differences lead to greater status, power or privilege for some groups over the other it is called social stratification.
Division of society into categories, ranks, or classes* can be based on either achieved or ascribed status
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There are four basic principles of stratification:
Social stratification is a trait of society, not simply
a function of individual differences.
Social stratification persists over generations.
However, most societies allow some social
mobility or changes in people’s position in a
system of social stratification.
Social mobility may be upward, downward, or
horizontal.
Social stratification is universal but variable.
Social stratification involves not just inequality but
beliefs.
History of Social Stratification:
In early societies, people shared a common social standing. As societies evolved and became more complex, they began to elevate some members.
* Hunting and Gathering Societies* Horticultural, Pastoral, and Agricultural Societies* Industrialized Societies
CLASS SYSTEM
a system in which social status is largely
determined by the family into which a
person is born.
… OPEN AND CLOSED CLASS SYSTEM
An open class system is the stratification that facilitates social mobility, Social mobility (change in status) is defined as movement of individuals, families, households, or other categories of people within or between layers of social stratification
CLOSED CLASS of social stratification in which status is ascribed from birth. In a closed system, there is little to no social mobility,
Class system is ACHIEVED (EFFORT)
ASCRIBED (BY BIRTH) STATUS
… In class system Reward is determined by achieved
status. (INCOME, WEALTH, COMFORT etc)
Marx believe that throughout human history only
two classes have appeared, those are Lord -
Slave in ancient society, Landlords - Peasants in
feudal
Property, prestige, and power are important
(Weber)
CASTE SYSTEM
A caste system is a class structure that is
determined by birth.(ASCRIBED STATUS)
Loosely, it means that in some societies, if your
parents are poor, you’re going to be poor, too.
Same goes for being rich, if you’re a glass-half-full
person (Optimists).
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CLOSED and LIFELONG
Caste system is based on Ascription
(ascribed status) No choice.
Birth alone determines a person’s entire
future. Allowing little or no mobility and is
lifelong or permanent.
IMMOBILITY AND INHERATED STATUS
Caste cannot be changed it’s inherited.
CASTE AND CLASS
SYSTEM Caste System:
Closed and
lifelong
Immobility and
inherited status
Based on specific
occupations
Ascribed status
Class System:
Open and mobile.
Reward is
determined by
achieved status.
Property, prestige,
and power are
important.
Slavery:
Slavery is a system of stratification in which
one person owns another, as he or she
would own property, and exploits the slave’s
labor for economic gain.
Slaves are one of the lowest categories in
any stratification system, as they possess
virtually no power or wealth of their own.
History of Slavery:
Many Americans view slavery as a phenomenon
that began with the colonization of the New
World and ended
with the Civil War, but slavery has existed for a
very long time.
Slavery appears in the Old Testament of the
Bible, as well as in the Qur’an. It was common
practice in ancient Greece and Rome .
Causes:
Racism was the primary cause of slavery. Reasons for slavery include debt, crime, war, and beliefs of inherent superiority.
Debt: Individuals who could not pay their way out of debt sometimes had to literally sell themselves. If a slave’s debt was not paid off before his or her death, the debt was often passed down to his or her children, enslaving several generations of the same family.
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Crime: Families against whom a crime had
been committed might enslave members of
the perpetrator’s family as compensation.
Prisoners of war: Slaves were often taken
during wartime, or when a new territory was
being invaded. When Rome was colonizing
much of the known world approximately
2,000 years ago, it routinely took slaves from
the lands it conquered.
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Beliefs of inherent superiority: Some
people believe that they have a right to
enslave those who they believe are
inherently inferior to them.
SLAVERY
* Slavery still exists today. In Mauritania, the
Sudan, Ghana, Benin slavery exists much as it
did 800 years ago. In other parts of the world
including Bangladesh, India, Nepal and
Pakistan debt slavery is common.
Estate System
An ancient stratification system that no
longer exists today was the estate system,
a three-tiered system composed of the
nobility, the clergy, and the commoners.
During the Middle Ages, much of Europe was
organized under this system.
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Nobility:
The noble class or the body of nobles in a
country.
Members of the nobility had great inherited
wealth and did little or no discernible work.
They occupied themselves in what we would
term leisure pursuits, such as hunting or
riding. Others cultivated interests in cultural
pursuits, such as art and music.
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Clergy:
The body of all people ordained for religious
duties, especially in the Christian Church.
The clergy was very powerful in European
society in the Middle Ages, and membership
offered long-term job security and a
comfortable living. The higher up the ladder
a priest went, the more power he had over
the masses.
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Commoners:
One of the ordinary or common people, as
opposed to the aristocracy or to royalty.
They spent their lives engaged in hard
physical labor, with virtually no chance of
moving up in society.
Social Class:
A group of people who share a common interest in the society.
The group of individuals who have similar status in the economic system of a society . They share same power, wealth and prestige.
Four common social classes informally recognized in many societies are: Upper class
Middle class
Working class
lower class
Upper Class (Elite Class):
The class occupying the highest position in the social hierarchy.
Has 25% of the nations wealth.
Only 1 to 3% in the society.
There are two types in the upper class
Upper – upper class (old money)
Lower – upper class (new money)
Middle Class:
The middle class is the “sandwich” class
The middle class mainly consists of White collar workers.
The middle class has following types
Upper middle
Lower middle
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Upper Middle Class:
according to Max Weber the upper middle
class consists of well-educated professionals
with comfortable income.
Have both good incomes and high social
prestige. Well-educated. But lower than the
upper class.
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Lower Middle Class:
Less educated with less income.
Provide support for professionals
Engage in data collection., record-keeping
Paralegals, bank tellers, sales
Working Class The working class is the group of people
which must work for someone else to make money for their survival.
This class has low income but they work stable.
Laborers in factories
Restaurant workers
Repair shops, garages
Lower class
They are the subject class.
They are blue collar workers
The are obsessed in the society.
They earn less then the minimum wage
Unemployed individuals are also included in the lower class
Unstable jobs, more work less income.
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