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Unit 3: Social Inequality

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Title: Unit 3: Social Inequality


1
Unit 3 Social Inequality
  • Ch 8 Social Stratification
  • Ch 9 Inequalities of Race and Ethnicity
  • Ch 10 Inequalities of Gender and Old Age

2
Ch 8 Social Stratification
  • Social stratification
  • The creation of layers (or ______) of people who
    ____________________ of scarce resources (ex.
    Income, wealth, power, prestige).
  • Each layer in the social stratification system is
    a social class (a segment of society whose
    members hold ____________ of resources shared
    values, norms, an identifiable lifestyle).
  • The of social classes a society has varies.
  • Most _______________ have 3 broad classes (upper,
    middle, lower) subdivided into smaller
    categories.
  • Some societies may only have __.

3
  • The political economic ramifications of social
    stratification
  • _________ observed the plight of the workers
    during the Industrial Revolution wrote The
    _____________________ (along w/ Friedrich Engels)
    in response.
  • He believed that history was an ongoing struggle
    b/w the ______ the haves vs. the have nots.
  • _______________ controlled the legal,
    educational, economic, gov.t systems. They
    used those systems to maintain or their
    power.
  • He believed that the ___________ (the
    proletariat) would rise up against the _________
    (the bourgeoisie) in a violent revolution. These
    violent revolutions would continue until
    eventually the capitalist system would by
    _________ everyone would work for the benefit
    of society share in its ______________.
  • His ideas led to the rise of _________ he
    became known as the father of communism (
    socialism).
  • Communist countries today China, Vietnam, Laos,
    North Korea Cuba.

4
  • Extremes in income wealth in the US
  • In new edition
  • Income is the amount of __________ an
    individual or group over a specific time period.
  • Its what you _______.
  • Wealth is the total amount of economic resources
    _________ a person or group.
  • Its what you _______.
  • In 2004, approximately __ mil Americans were
    living in poverty (more than ___), but there
    were only about _____ mil millionaires 341
    billionaires.
  • The richest 20 of American households received
    over __ of the nations income the lowest 20
    received less than 4.
  • Income inequality is ____________!
  • The top __ of Americans have ___ of the total
    wealth.

5
  • Power prestige
  • Power is the ability to _______________ of
    others, even against their will.
  • Not always related to ____.
  • Can come from knowledge, fame, social position,
    leadership abilities, etc
  • Prestige is the recognition, respect,
    admiration attached to ______________.
  • Defined by ones culture society.
  • Must be _____________ cannot be taken.
  • Social positions that are considered the most
    important have the most ______ in America its
    often those positions that accumulate _______
    power b/c they are valued highly w/in our
    society, but ____________. (Ex. priests or
    ministers).

6
Is it an example of wealth, power, or
prestige? _________ 1. Mr. Chamblees Swiss
bank account _________ 2. Anna Rose is voted
Most Likeable _________ 3. A politician
giving in to the interests of a lobby _________
4. Ms. Griggs wins the Teacher of the Year
award _________ 5. Mr. Bowens stock market
holdings _________ 6. A Supreme Court
ruling _________ 7. The respect given to
Officer Hill _________ 8. A wife makes her
husband carry her purse
End Section 1
7
  • Explanations of stratification The functionalist
    theory
  • Believes stratification guarantees that the most
    ____________ fill the most ________________, that
    they perform their tasks competently, that they
    are rewarded for their efforts.
  • They recognize that _________ exits b/c certain
    jobs are more important than others those jobs
    often require __________ /or training.

8
  • Explanations of stratification The conflict
    theory
  • Believes _______________ b/c some people are
    willing to ________ others.
  • So they believe stratification occurs more b/c of
    ______ than b/c most people willingly accept it.
  • More accepting of Marxs ideas about ___________.
  • People who own the means of production are able
    to spread their ______________ through schools,
    churches, the gov.t, the media, etc
  • False consciousness refers to the working-class
    _________ of those ideas values.

9
  • Explanations of stratification The symbolic
    interactionism theory
  • Believes people are _______________ the existing
    stratification structure.
  • We are taught to believe that a persons ________
    is a result of talent effort. So those on the
    top _______________ those on the bottom deserve
    to be there as well.
  • So we shouldnt ___________ the system.
  • This can often result in people at the
    ________________ from self-esteem those at
    the top have self-esteem.
  • Goes back to the looking-glass self (your image
    of yourself based on what you believe others
    think of you).

End Section 2
10
  • Social classes in the US
  • Class consciousness is a sense of identification
    w/ the goals interests of a social class.
  • Never __________________ in the US.
  • Changeable full of exceptions.
  • The Upper Class ____ of pop.
  • Upper-upper class or _________ old ,
    _________________
  • Lower-upper class new , _________, may have
    more than upper-upper, but still not accepted
    into the more exclusive groups.
  • The Middle Class _________ of pop.
  • Upper-middle class (14) successful in
    business, politics, military, etc Can live well
    save , are usually __________ ________,
    often active in voluntary political
    organizations.
  • Middle-middle class (30) _________ group.
    Includes small business owners, low-level
    managers, teachers, cops, etc Earn around the
    national ___________.

11
  • The Working Class - _____ of pop.
  • Lower-middle class includes truck drivers,
    machine operators, clerical workers, etc Paid
    ____________. Have below average income
    _______________. Generally lack medical
    insurance retirement benefits. Worry about
    illnesses unemployment. Except for ______, not
    likely to belong to organizations. Rarely enter
    the ______________.
  • The Working Poor ____ of pop.
  • People employed in ___________ w/ the lowest pay
    who dont earn enough to get out of _________.
    Include manual laborers, fast-food workers, etc
    Often lack steady employment. Rarely belong to
    organizations or participate in politics.

12
  • The Underclass ____ of pop.
  • People who are usually unemployed often come
    from families w/ a history of ______________.
    Either work part-time menial jobs or are on
    public assistance. Lack education skills.
    Commonly have physical mental _________. Many
    are single mothers w/ little or no income.
  • Can be born into working poor or underclass or
    come into them w/ _______, loss of a spouse, lack
    of education or training, addiction, or through
    acquiring a ___________.
  • Very difficult to ______________.

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14
Social classes people self-identified with.
End Section 3
15
  • What is poverty?
  • In new edition
  • Absolute poverty is the absence of enough to
    secure ____________________.
  • Relative poverty is a measure of poverty based on
    the _______________ b/w those at the bottom of a
    society the rest of the society.
  • In other words, its how poor a person feels by
    _________________ to others in their society.
  • Relative poverty ___________ from one society to
    another (ex. US vs. Nigeria or even the poorest
    person in a _______ neighborhood).
  • The US gov.t measures poverty by setting an
    _________________ that anyone making less than
    would be considered poor.
  • In 2004, the poverty line for a family of 4 was
    _______ _____ of Americans were living in
    poverty.

16
  • Identifying the poor
  • Groups most likely to be poor are _____________
    households, children, the elderly, people w/
    ___________, people who live alone or w/
    nonrelatives.
  • Approx. ___ of the poor are white however, only
    about 7.5 of whites are poor, compare w/ 23 of
    blacks and Latinos.
  • So although blacks Latinos only make up about ¼
    of Americans, they make up about ½ of the poor.
  • Children under 6 yrs old make up _________ of all
    age groups living in poverty at around 22.
  • Women have become ________________ to live in
    poverty since the 1960s as well. The trend of
    women children making up an increasing
    proportion of the poor is known as the
    feminization of poverty.
  • Why is this occurring?
  • B/c women _______ then men, those w/ kids find it
    harder to keep long-term employment, a lack of
    good ___________.

17
  • Fighting poverty
  • The US didnt really begin _______ _______ until
    the mid-1960s under President Lyndon Johnsons
    _____ _________ programs.
  • Most American programs fighting poverty focus on
    ______________ through youth opportunity programs
    work experience programs.
  • Some programs have been criticized for _______
    fears that theyre causing people to become
    _______ upon the gov.t to help them longer than
    needed.

End Section 4
18
  • Social mobility
  • The movement of people b/w ________________.
  • Horizontal mobility involves changing from one
    job to another in the _________________ (ex
    soldier to teacher, waitress to cashier, etc).
  • Vertical mobility involves ____________________
    ___________ in job status or social class
  • When vertical mobility takes place over a
    ____________, its called intergenerational
    mobility.
  • In a caste system (a stratification structure
    that _____________ for social mobility a
    closed-class system) social status is _______
    cant be changed through individual effort.
    Careers choices interactions w/ people of other
    castes are _______. One doesnt ________ outside
    their caste.
  • Ex. include South Africa under apartheid (castes
    based on ____) India (castes based on
    _______________ according to the Hindu religion).
  • In a _________________ individuals can move b/w
    classes their social class is based on merit
    effort.

19
Is it an example of intergenerational,
vertical, or horizontal mobility ? _________ 1.
A paramedic becomes a fireman _________ 2. A
businessman is laid off and becomes a
waiter _________ 3. A factory worker becomes a
the manager _________ 4. The daughter of a
janitor becomes a professor _________ 5. A
highly decorated general is elected
governor _________ 6. A doctor quits medicine
and becomes a trucker _________ 7. A taxi
driver whose father was an executive _________
8. A cops wife quits teaching to become a nurse
End Section 5
20
Ch 9 and 10 Quiz
21
Ch 9 Inequalities of Race and Ethnicity
  • Minorities
  • Groups of people w/ physical or cultural traits
    different from those of the ___________________
    in the society.
  • In sociology, it is NOT necessarily a group that
    makes up a __________________________. Ex
  • __________ are a minority.
  • In South Africa, _______ are a minority.
  • Key features of minorities
  • Distinctive physical or cultural characteristics
    which can ________________ from the majority.
  • ________ by the majority it has a lesser share
    of the society's desired goods, services,
    privileges.
  • Often believed by the majority to be _________ -
    often used to justify discrimination.
  • Have a common sense of identity w/ strong group
    ___________.
  • The majority determines who is in the
    minority through ______________ so they
    are a minority at birth.

22
  • Race
  • People sharing certain ______________________
    characteristics that are considered important
    w/in a society.
  • Biologists use characteristics like _______, eye
    color, hair color, ___________, facial features,
    head form, height to determine race.
  • The most common system classifies races into 3
    major categories Caucasian, ___________,
    Negroid.
  • There is NO such thing as a ______ race.
    Genetic markers typical of one race show up in
    other races quite ____________. Most scientists
    consider racial classifications arbitrary
    _____________.
  • Also, __________ is only determined by about 6
    genes while ________ is controlled by dozens of
    genes. So a 57 white woman may be more
    ______________ to a 57 black woman than to a
    51 white woman.
  • ______________ characteristics that relate to
    race are more important than physical differences
    for sociologists.

23
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Groups indentified by cultural, religious, or
    national characteristics.
  • So they are __________ defined by their language,
    religion, values, beliefs, norms, customs.
  • So _________ characteristics define racial
    minorities _________ differences define ethnic
    minorities.
  • Though part of the larger culture, theyre also
    separate b/c the ethnic majority puts up barriers
    to _______________ /or b/c the minority wishes
    to _______ its cultural national origins.
  • Ethnocentrism is judging others in terms of ones
    own ________________. It creates feelings of
    us vs. them. Can lead to prejudice
    discrimination.

End Section 1
24
  • Patterns of assimilation
  • Minority groups are either _______ (leading to
    assimilation) or ________ (leading to conflict).
  • Assimilation is the _________ of minority groups
    into the dominant society. The minority groups
    are given full ______________ in all aspects of
    the society.
  • In the US, assimilation has been
    Anglo-conformity, melting pot, cultural
    pluralism, accommodation.
  • _______________is the most prevalent pattern of
    assimilation in the US. (Anglo meaning of
    _______ descent). This involves minorities
    accepting traditional Anglo values customs.
  • __________ b/c minorities are required to
    conform.
  • Melting pot is when all ethnic racial
    minorities __________________________.
  • Common myth in many US history textbooks.
  • Cultural pluralism is when cultures exist side by
    side maintain a ______________________________.
  • More like a tossed salad.
  • Accommodation is when a minority maintains its
    own culturally unique way of life accommodates
    the majority culture ____________________.
  • Ex. The Amish

25
  • Patterns of conflict
  • 3 main ways in which dominant cultures have
    __________ minority groups
  • 1. Genocide The systematic effort to destroy an
    _____________ (Ex. The Nazi efforts to kill off
    Jews during The Holocaust).
  • 2. __________________ When a minority is forced
    to move to a remote location or to leave the
    territory controlled by the majority (Ex.
    American Indians forced to move on to
    reservations).
  • 3. Subjugation Process by which a minority
    group is _______________ to the benefits of a
    society. This is the most common pattern of
    conflict. 2 types
  • De jure segregation is denial of equal access
    based on ___________ (Ex. Segregation of US
    schools prior to Brown vs. The Board of
    Education).
  • De facto segregation is denial of equal access
    based on ________________ (Ex. Refusing to hire a
    minority as an executive).

End Section 2
26
  • Prejudice, stereotypes, racism, discrimination
  • Prejudice is widely held negative or positive
    ________ toward a group (minority or majority)
    its individual members.
  • __________________.
  • Although your book only says negative attitudes,
    prejudice can include positive attitudes as well.
  • Prejudice is a generalization based on biased or
    ___________________. These attitudes come from
    strong emotions, so theyre difficult to change,
    even when faced w/ overwhelming
    __________________.
  • When people meet someone who doesnt fit in to
    their stereotypes, they usually believe that
    person is the exception to the rule instead of
    ________________________.
  • People tend to be prejudice in favor of those
    they see as __________________ against those
    they see as different.
  • A stereotype is an oversimplified, hard to change
    way of seeing people who belong to
    _______________.
  • Racism is an extreme form of prejudice that
    assumes _____________ of one group over others.
    So racists believe that discrimination /or
    exclusion is justified b/c of their own
    superiority.
  • Discrimination is the _____________ of members of
    certain groups.
  • Prejudice is an attitude discrimination is an
    ______.
  • A person may be prejudice, but not discriminate.
    Also, a person may discriminate (due to something
    like social pressure) but not be prejudice.

27
  • Why do prejudice discrimination exist?
  • Hate crimes
  • Functionalists stress how ethnocentrism (which
    leads to prejudice discrimination) helps hold
    the _______ ________________.
  • Conflict theorists stress the _________ b/w
    various groups for power - even b/w minorities.
  • Symbolic interactionists stress how certain words
    or symbols can _________________________ (Ex. to
    blacklist someone or give them a black eye)
    or how minorities may begin to believe negative
    stereotypes which can lead to a self-fulfilling
    prophecy (having an expectation that leads to
    behavior that then causes the expectation to
    ___________________).
  • Criminal acts that are motivated by extreme
    _____________.
  • ________________ someone based on race, religion,
    sexual orientation, national origin, or ancestry.
  • People who commit hate crimes have vocabularies
    filled w/ demeaning stereotypes that attempt to
    __________________ against their victims.

End Section 3
28
  • Institutionalized discrimination
  • ______________ that grow out of common
    behaviors/attitudes are a part of the
    _____________________.
  • May or may not be ___________.
  • Intentional ex Many realtors used to steer
    prospective minority homeowners to certain
    neighborhoods away from others.
  • Unintentional ex Many urban areas are
    predominately made up of minorities (especially
    blacks) b/c they dont average as high a wage
    as predominately white suburbanites, their
    schools receive ______ , so many of those
    minority children have to attend schools w/ fewer
    resources.

29
  • How has institutionalized discrimination affected
    different minorities?
  • Blacks Barriers include skin color features
    which make it ____________ people of this
    minority Americas history of slavery
    segregation which have contributed to a _____
    ________ for many creating an underclass (people
    typically unemployed who come from families that
    have been poor for generations).
  • The average black family earns ____ of what the
    average white family earns.
  • Are also much more likely to work in __________
    service jobs.
  • Have approximately _______ as high unemployment
    rate which doesnt even factor in the hidden
    unemployment (unemployment that includes people
    who have become _________ given up looking for
    a job part-time workers who want full-time
    jobs) which would the gap even more.
  • The high school graduation rate was 77 (84 for
    whites) college was 15 (25 for whites) in
    1999.
  • Although still widely ______________, blacks have
    made major gains in the last 50 yrs in
    professional, technical, political careers.

30
  • Latinos (ethnic minorities from ______________
    including Mexico, Central America, South America
    the Caribbean) They are the largest
    _____________ minority in the US.
  • Just over ½ have completed ______________.
  • Many work in low-paying, low-status jobs.
  • Are becoming much more ______________.
  • American Indians There are over 2 mil consisting
    of about ______ separate tribes bands which
    makes them a much more ___________________ than
    most people realize.
  • Over ¼ live below the ____________.
  • Lowest graduation rate.
  • Lowest annual _________.
  • About ¼ of Indians live on ___________. Poverty
    lack of education are about twice as bad for
    Indians who live on reservations as for those who
    do not.
  • Asian Americans Most ____________________
    minority due in large part to their use of the
    educational system for upward mobility.
  • ______ have completed college.
  • ________________ (includes descendents from
    Eastern Southern Europe) typically blue-collar
    workers in large eastern US cities. Tend to
    favor more integration _____ support of the
    poor. Dont typically experience the
    _____________ affecting other minorities.

End Section 4
31
Ch 10 Inequalities of Gender and Old Age
  • How gender shapes us
  • A persons sex is his/her classification as male
    or female based on _____________________.
  • Biological determinism is the belief that
    _________ _____________ are the result of
    inherited physical characteristics.
  • So if men are believed to be more intelligent
    women more emotional b/c of their sex, this would
    need to be true in __________ in order to be
    correct.
  • However, significant behavior differences b/w men
    women havent been causally linked to
    biological characteristics. Though biology may
    create some behavioral tendencies in the sexes,
    they are so weak that theyre easily overridden
    by ________________________.
  • Our gender identity is ____________ of being
    masculine or feminine, based on our ________.

32
  • Research indicates that male female brains are
    __________________ in structure. Ex. Women are
    more likely to use both halves of their brain at
    the same time show more activity in the newer
    more highly developed region of the brain thought
    to be linked to _____________________.
  • Most sociologists believe that ___________
    _______ isnt primarily the result of biology,
    but of culture socialization.
  • Researchers often look at how men women are
    different instead of how similar they are.

End Section 1
33
  • Sociological views of gender roles
  • Functionalism Believes that any pattern of
    behavior that ______________________ will become
    unimportant. Division of male/female
    responsibilities used to be ____________ back
    when humans hunted gathered (men were bigger
    stronger, so were better hunters they were
    also more expendable). Today, traditional
    division of labor b/w men women has created
    ____________ (problems).
  • Conflict Theory Men ______ by keeping women
    politically, economically, socially __________.

34
  • Symbolic Interactionism Focuses on how boys
    girls learn to act the way they are _________
    ___. The social process of learning to act as a
    boy or a girl is called gender socialization.
    Gender is acquired in large part from interaction
    w/ ______, teachers, peers, mass media.
  • Children are given gender specific
    ____________________.
  • Studies show that girls are __________, talked to
    more, handled more gently than boys. Boys are
    expected to be more assertive discouraged from
    ________.
  • Teachers also (often inadvertently) encourage
    boys to be more __________ __________ girls to
    be more passive.
  • Peers reinforce gender roles by typically giving
    ________________ to those who exemplify
    traditional gender roles (Ex. Boys as football
    players girls as cheerleaders).

End Section 2
35
  • Sexism in the workplace
  • Sexism is a set of beliefs, attitudes, norms
    values used to ________________________.
  • Attempts to justify mens leadership power
    positions.
  • Although women are more active in the labor
    force, they are concentrated in ___________
    occupations. This is known as occupational sex
    segregation. For ex, women occupy almost all
    _________ jobs (such as secretaries, clerks,
    stenographers) whose job it is to support those
    higher up the occupational ladder.
  • Even in ___________ jobs, women typically in the
    lower-prestige, lower-paid jobs.
  • For every dollar a man makes, a woman averages
    about _________. This is known as the gender
    wage gap.
  • Over 1/3 of the gap is due to the differences in
    _____________________.
  • Ex Many women leave the labor force to start a
    family.
  • Less than 1/3 of the gap is due to the ______
    _____________ of men women in certain positions
    (meaning more men tend to be employed in higher
    level positions).
  • Over 1/3 of the gap is due to ____________.

36
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38
  • The ERA (Equal Rights Amendment) would have
    assured that women enjoyed the same rights
    protections __________. It passed in Congress in
    1972, but Conservatives feared that it disrupt
    Americas ____________ launched a Stop-ERA
    campaign. The amendment was _____________ by
    enough states.
  • Some ___________________ have been passed
    however.
  • In addition, women minorities have greater
    difficulties in getting _____ ___________. This
    invisible barrier that obstructs their
    advancement up the _____________ is known as the
    glass ceiling.

Ratified --- Red Ratified, then rescinded  ----
Yellow    Ratified in 1 house of legislature
  --- Green   Not ratified --- Blue
End Section 3
39
  • Ageism
  • A set of beliefs, attitudes, norms, values used
    to ________________ prejudice discrimination.
  • Age stratification is the unequal distribution of
    ___________________ based on age.
  • Age can be an advantage or disadvantage for any
    group, but sociologists are particularly
    interested in studying the inequality among
    _________. As Americas median age is , this
    affects ______________.

40
  • Sociological views of ageism
  • Functionalism Believes that elderly people in a
    society are ______________________ they play in
    that society. Ageism isnt an issue in
    _____________. In some societies, w/ age comes
    respect the view that they have much knowledge
    to share. W/ ____________, the elderly are often
    _______ b/c they are seen as no long contributing
    to the common good through work b/c change
    occurs so quickly, younger workers are more
    likely to possess the _____________ needed in the
    workplace.
  • Conflict Theory Ageism is used to _____ the
    elderly (thus making them a __________). By
    stereotyping the elderly as intellectually dull,
    inflexible, unproductive, younger people
    benefit in the __________________ against older
    workers employers can pay them ____ than older
    workers.
  • Symbolic Interactionism Like racism, ageism is
    _____. Stereotypes are created through
    _______________________, children learn ageism.

End Section 4
41
  • Economics of the elderly
  • _________ among the elderly is difficult to
    measure b/c of several factors
  • They have to spend proportionally more on
    ___________________, but the federal gov.t
    assumes they require less to live (thus,
    _________________).
  • Many are near poor ____________.
  • The _________ are older people who either live
    in institutions or w/ relatives b/c they cant
    ________ to live alone.
  • Also, the median income is distorted by the fewer
    older people w/ __________.
  • Older people who are a racial or ethnic minority
    are ________ to be poor than white older people.
  • Elderly women are __________ to be poor as men,
    particularly those who arent ________.

42
  • Politics the elderly
  • The older Americans get, the more likely they are
    to ____. However, they are a very diverse
    population dont vote as a bloc, even on issues
    directly related to them.
  • This _____________ weakens their political power,
    but as their s , they may become an
    ________________________.
  • Some interest groups have formed to assist the
    elderly such as the AARP (___________________
    ____________). Interest groups are organizations
    formed to influence political decision making.

End Section 5
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