Title: Ch 7 Global Stratification
1Ch 7 Global Stratification
- Fundamentals of Social Stratification
2Stratification
- Definition
- Types
- Basis of social class
- Why universal
3Definition
- Write down your definition
- Share with the class
- Division of people into layers according to
relative property, power, prestige - Universal
- Most fundamental is by gender
- Worlds societies also stratified (between
societies)
4Systems of Stratification
5Slavery
- Some people owned by other people
- Uncommon in hunting gathering
- Common in agricultural
- Typically based on
- Debt
- Crime
- War
6Slavery (cont.)
- Not sign of inferiority
- Could be temporary status
- Obligation for certain number of years
- Not necessarily inherited
- Not necessarily powerless poor
- Still in world today, e.g., Sudan
- Examine U.S.
7Slavery in U.S.
- Need for labor
- Indian enslavement didnt work
- Tried Africans
- Some think slavery led to racism not other way
around - Owners developed ideology to justify
- System of beliefs
- Childlike, helpless, needed to be taken care of
- Some not fully human
- Slave states passed law to obtain control
- Still legal discrimination into 20th C.
8Slavery in U.S.
- Slave states passed law to obtain control
- Made slavery inheritable
- Some states illegal to hold a meeting or be
away from home w/o a pass - Still legal discrimination into 20th C.
- 2 separate school systems until 1954
- Poll tax
9Caste
- Status ascribed
- No social mobility
- Reinforced by endogamy
- Marry only within caste
- Examples
- Traditional India
- U.S. based on race after slavery
10Caste - Traditional India
- Castes based on religion occupation
- Castes
- Priests/scholars
- Nobles/warriors
- Merchants/artisans
- Outcastes (degrading laborers)/untouchables
- System abolished in 1949
- Rituals based on caste still practiced
- Ceremonies at birth, marriage, death
11Class
- Based on wealth, power, prestige
- Social mobility possible, not probable
- Born into parents class
- Can change based on achievements
- Few actually socially mobile
12Basis of Social Class Marx
- Depends on relationship to means of production in
industrial society - Bourgeosie
- Proletariat
- Resources controlled by bourgeoisie
- Until proletariat have class consciousness
- Realize source of their oppression
- Revolt
- False consciousness keeps this from happening
- Thinking have more in common with capitalists
13Basis of Social Class Weber
- Critic of Marx
- Class has 3 components
- Wealth (property), power, prestige
- Class, power, status
- Economic factors very important BUT
- Some have power but dont own means of prod.
- E.g., managers of companies
- Prestige comes from wealth, but not always
- E.g., scientists, educators
- Power comes from wealth, but not always
- E.g., judges, police
14Why is stratification universal?
- Functionalist explanation
- Conflict explanation
- Lenskis synthesis
15Why is stratification universal?
- Functionalist Davis Moore
- Meets needs of society (functional)
- Fill positions in society
- Some more essential to societys survival, e.g.,
?? - More important positions filled by most capable
- Offer rewards to most capable qualified
- Often require
- Extensive training
- Long hours
- Significant responsibility accountability
- Higher rewards necessary as incentive
16Why universal? Functionalist
- Tumins critique
- How measure importance of a position?
- Cant use rewards of position, since thats part
of the definition of stratification - Produces circular argument
- Need independent way to measure
- If strat works as functionalists describe,
positions would be awarded on basis of merit, but
many exceptions - Some inherit positions
- Some go to college because have money, not
because very able - Stratification ought to benefit everyone, but
dysfunctional for women, minorities, the poor
17Why universal? Conflict
- Groups conflict to get more resources
- Use power to maintain what already have
- Use social institutions to maintain power
- Mosca
- Society needs organization to get work done
- Some must be leaders to make decisions
- Results in inequality of power
- Give themselves more rewards
- Marx
18Why universal? Conflict
- Marx
- People in power because they control resources
- Not because they are more able
- Eventually class consciousness of workers
overcomes control of bourgeoisie - Struggle difficult because bourgeoisie control
police, schools, politics
19Why universal? Lenski
- Created synthesis based on evolution of society
- Functionalist correct when considering meeting
basic needs of society - Conflict correct when considering surpluses
- An elite emerges controlling those resources
- Hunting gathering minimal stratification
- Horticultural leadership has some privilege
- Agricultural
- System of inequality emerges
- Class or caste
20Why universal? Lenski
- Industrial
- Reverses trend
- Actually less inequality, even though great
surpluses - Society too complicated
- Elite must share with middle class to manage
complex institutions
21Global Stratification
- Most Industrialized Nations
- Industrializing Nations
- Least Industrialized Nations
22Most Industrialized Nations
- Location
- North America U.S., Canada
- Europe Britain, France, Austria, Germany,
Switzerland, Norway, Denmark, Italy, etc. - Asia Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong
- Middle East Israel
- Oceania Australia, New Zealand
- Characteristics
- Capitalistic
- Poor better off the average person in Least Indus
Nations - 16 of population, but 31 of land
23Industrializing Nations
- Location
- Europe Russia, Spain, Portugal, Greece,
Hungary, Poland, Czech Republic, Slovenia,
Slovakia - N. Am. Mexico
- S. Am Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay,
Venezuala - Asia S. Korea, Thailand
- Middle East Turkey
- Africa South Africa
- Characteristics
- 16 of population, 20 of land
- Lower incomes standard of living than Most
Indus. Nations - Do have electricity, indoor plumbing autos,
telephones, food, life expectancy higher than
L.I.N. - More poverty illiteracy than in M.I.N.
24Least Industrialized Nations
- Location
- Central America Cuba
- South Am Peru, Paraguay, Ecuador, Bolivia
- Africa most
- Asia China, N. Korea, Pakistan, India ,
Afghanistan, - Middle East Lebanon, Iraq, Iran
- Oceania New Guinea, Philippines, Indonesia,
Vietnam - Characteristics
- Most living on less than 1,000/yr.
- Street children in sewers
- Nor running water, indoor plumbing
- No trained doctors, central water supply
- Fast population growth because infant mortality
reduced by imported medicine, but births still
high
25How Nations Become Stratified?
- Colonialism
- World systems theory
- Globalization of capitalism
- Culture of poverty
26How Nations Become Stratified?
- Colonialism
- First to industrialize had advantage
- Invested in transportation armies
- Political colonialism pattern of European
nations - Economic colonialism pattern of U.S.
- Exploit people natural resources for benefit of
dominant nation
27How Nations Become Stratified?
- World systems theory
- Immanuel Wallerstein
- Industrialization led to 4 groups of nations
- Core nations
- Britain, France, Netherlands, Germany
- Industrialized rich, powerful
- Semiperiphery
- Mediterranean
- Depended on trade w/core
- Economic dev stagnated
- Periphery
- Eastern Europe
- Sold crops to core
- Less economic dev
- External area
- Africa, Asia (most)
- No capitalist economic dev
28How Nations Become Stratified?
- Globalization of capitalism
- Many nations now following principles of
capitalism - Production trade very interconnected
- Events/policies in one affect other nations
revolutions, natural disasters, trade
protectionist policies, etc. - Culture of poverty explanation
- Oscar Lewis
- Way of life perpetuates poverty
- Mostly rural, subsistence agriculture
- Traditional ways more secure, no experimentation
- Religion encourages fatalism
29What did you learn?
- Write down two things you learned about
stratification - Share with the class