SOCIAL STRATIFICATION - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 78
About This Presentation
Title:

SOCIAL STRATIFICATION

Description:

social stratification – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1426
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 79
Provided by: Claud138
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: SOCIAL STRATIFICATION


1
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
2
What is Social Stratification?
  • For tens of thousands of years, humans lived in
    small hunting and gathering societies.
  • Stratification based on Gender Age
  • As societies became more complex, major changes
    came about.
  • Changes elevated certain categories of the
    population by giving them more power, money, and
    prestige.

3
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
  • Structured inequality of access to rewards,
    resources, and privileges that are scarce and
    desirable within a society.
  • Inequality of an entire category of people, who
    have different access to social rewards as a
    result of their status in a social hierarchy.

4
  • Social stratification is a trait of society, not
    simply a reflection of individual differences.
  • Children born into wealthy families are more
    likely than children born in poverty to
    experience good healthy, achieve academically,
    succeed in lifes work and live a long life.
  • Titanic lower strata did not die because of
    personal failing

5
  • Social stratification persists over generations.
  • In all societies, parents pass their social
    position on to their children.
  • Social stratification is universal but variable.
  • In some societies, inequality is mostly a matter
    of prestige in others, wealth or power is the
    key dimension of difference. More importantly
    some societies display more inequality than
    others.
  • Social stratification involves not just
    inequality but beliefs.
  • Any system of inequality gives some people more
    than others and the society also defines the
    arrangements as fair.

6
Social Inequality
  • Social Inequality ? condition in which members of
    a society have different amounts of wealth,
    prestige, and power
  • Wealth All of a persons material assets (land,
    auto, home, jewelry)
  • Which is the cause and which is the effect?
  • Inequality or stratification

7
ALL SOCIETIES HAVE SOME STRATIFICATIONFOUR
GENERAL SYSTEMS OF STRATIFICATION
  • Slavery
  • Caste
  • Estate
  • Social Class

8
Slavery
  • Ownership of some people by others (due to debt,
    crime, war).
  • Examples
  • Ancient times- Greece and Rome captives of war.
  • USA and Latin America- Workforce in 1800s.
  • Present Day- Outsourcing??

9
CASTE SYSTEM
  • Status is determined by birth and is life long
    (ascribed).
  • A pure caste system is closed because birth alone
    determines ones destiny, with little or no
    opportunity for social mobility based on effort.

10
CASTE SYSTEM
  • Hereditary systems of rank- usually with
    religious justification/significance.
  • Fixed and immobile.
  • Traditional caste groups have specific
    occupations
  • Generations of a family perform the same type of
    work
  • Maintaining a rigid social hierarchy depends on
    people marrying within their own categories
    mixed marriages would blur the ranking of
    children
  • Endogamy- marriage between people of the same
    social category- marry within caste.
  • Born into caste, stay the same as parents (same
    occupation).
  • Caste norms guide people to stay in the company
    of their own kind
  • Caste systems rest on powerful cultural beliefs

11
CASTE SYSTEM VARNAS
  • Brahmins (priests)
  • Kshatriyas (warriors nobles)
  • Vaishyas (merchants)
  • Shudras (common laborers)
  • Dalits (untouchables)
  • Members of three highest varnas are called twice
    born because they have gone through a ceremony
    entailing spiritual rebirth

12
  • Practice of caste-climbing has led to the spread
    of a uniform value system throughout India.
  • Widespread agreement concerning values and
    criteria for distinguishing a low caste from a
    high caste.

13
CASTE IN CONTEMPORARY INDIA
  • Impossible to maintain the caste system unaltered
    in contemporary India.
  • Introduction of new professions
  • Wageworkers are hired on the basis of
    qualifications (achieved status) rather then
    caste
  • Authorities actively try to level out differences
    between castes through quotas for various castes
    in the public sector.
  • Urbanization makes it difficult to classify the
    people one meets.
  • Moving to city where no one knows you, one can
    escape stigma of caste

14
Estates System
  • European society- Feudalism and Middle Ages
  • Peasants work land leased to them from Nobles.
  • In return the Peasants get military and other
    services (use of farming tools).
  • Wealth and power came from business not just land
    and agriculture.
  • Estates system grew into Class System.

15
CLASS SYSTEM
  • Open system based on money or material
    possessions (achieved).

16
Social Mobility
  • Movement from one strata to another (can be up or
    down).
  • Movement between classes is easier than in other
    systems but there is still inequality within
    social classes.
  • Status consistency- the degree of consistency in
    a persons social standing across various
    dimensions of social inequality.

17
SOCIAL MOBILITY A CHANGE IN ONES POSITION
  • Ascribed vs Achieved status
  • Caste system position at birth determines (or
    mostly so)
  • Class system like ours, there is considerable
    mobility - one can achieve status, , power
  • Are we a true meritocracy?
  • Meritocracy - Social stratification based solely
    on merit

18
2 kinds of Social Mobility
  • Structural Mobility when of higher status
    positions increases, upward mobility inevitable
  • Industrialization did this (Marx did not
    anticipate structural mobility)
  • Exchange Mobility without structural changes,
    for every person who moved up, one would need to
    move down

19
WHAT HAS CAUSED US TO HAVE SOCIAL CLASSES TODAY
IN THE US?
  • Both Karl Marx and Max Weber had explanations.

20
KARL MARX EXPLAINED THAT IT IS ECONOMICS (
PROPERTY) THAT CAUSES THE CLASS SYSTEM. - WHO
OWES OR CONTROLS WHAT.
21
(No Transcript)
22
MARX PREDICTED
  • The rich would get richer
  • The workers would develop a class conscious and
    become aware of the rich taking advantage of
    them.
  • The workers would over come false class
    consciousness.
  • Revolution would ensue and communism would
    replace capitalism.

23
MARX EXPLAINED
  • The proletarians of the world have nothing to
    lose but their chains. They have a world to gain.
    Workers of the world, unite!
  • Exploitation
  • the utilization of a subordinate group, by a
    group in a superordinate position for its own
    economic or other advantage (surplus of wealth)

24
KARL MARXS VIEW OF CAPITALISM
25
KARL MARXS VIEW OF COMMUNISM
  • From each according to his abilities, to each
    according to his needs.

26
MARXS THEORY
  • Marx explained through the family, opportunity
    and wealth are passed down from generation to
    generation.
  • The legal system defends private property and
    inheritance.
  • Elite children mix at exclusive schools, forging
    social ties that will benefit them throughout
    their lives.
  • Capitalist society reproduces the class structure
    in each new generation.

27
HOW WAS MARX WRONG?
  • not the only way societies stratified
  • 2 great classes did not emerge
  • Industrialization initially produced great
    inequality, but eventually produced a middle
    class
  • Revolution did not occur as he predicted (US most
    industrialized of all)
  • Classless society impossible

28
Why No Marxist Revolution?
  • The fragmentation of the capitalist class.
  • Day-to-day operations of large corporations are
    now in the hands of a managerial class, whose
    members may or may not be major stockholders.
  • A higher standard of living.
  • A century ago most workers were in factories or
    on farms performing blue-collar occupations,
    lower-prestige work that involves mostly manual
    labor. Today, most workers hold white-collar
    occupations, higher-prestige work that involves
    mostly mental activity. Most of todays
    white-collar workers do not think of themselves
    as an industrial proletariat.

29
  • More worker organizations.
  • Workers today have organizational clout that
    they lacked a century ago. Worker management
    disputes are settled without threatening the
    capitalist system.
  • More extensive legal protections.
  • During the twentieth century, the government
    passed laws to make the workplace safer and
    developed programs such as unemployment
    insurance, disability protection, and Social
    Security.

30
Max Weber Wealth, Status, and Power
  • Weber saw Marxs two-class model simplistic.
  • - Observed that stratification was more then
  • - Life Chances determined by more then just
  • - Ex. ? Clergy might have status and power, but
    little money

31
MAX WEBER
  • Believed that social class is more than just
    differences in material wealth.
  • Other defining characteristics
  • Power ability to achieve ones goals and
    control others, even against the will of others
  • Political Status
  • Prestige Power degree of respect, favorable
    regard, or importance according to an individual
    by members of a society
  • Social Status
  • Wealth (Property) accumulated economic
    resources
  • Economic Status

32
  • Webers view of social stratification in
    industrial societies as a multidimensional
    ranking rather than a hierarchy of clearly
    defined classes.
  • Socioeconomic status (SES) - a composite ranking
    based on various dimensions of social inequality.
  • Social stratification according to Weber is
    variable and complex.

33
Inequalities in History
  • Weber points out that each of his three
    dimensions of social inequality stands out at
    different points in the evolution of human
    societies.
  • Agrarian societies emphasize status or social
    prestige, typically in the form of honor.

34
DO WE NEED TO HAVE STRATIFICATION?
35
HOW DO FUNCTIONALISTS VIEW SOCIAL STRATIFICATION?
  • Societys positions must be filled.
  • Some positions are more important than others.
  • The more important positions are filled by
    qualified people.

36
HOW DO CONFLICT THEORISTS VIEW SOCIAL
STRATIFICATION?
  • No society can exist unless it is organized.
  • Leadership means inequalities of power.
  • Human nature is self-centered so there are
    injustices in how the power is divided and used.

37
  • Great quote Functionalism can explain why
    doctors (or fill in the blank) make more than
    orderlies, but it requires conflict theory to
    explain why the gap is as large as it is.

38
MODERN SOCIETY AND CONFLICT
  • Limited amount of resources in society.
  • Not evenly distributed.
  • Conflict Theory addresses how those with
    resources attempt to hold onto them and how those
    with limited resources try to obtain them.

39
MARX DID NOT BELIEVE THE PEOPLE IN POWER ARE
THERE BECAUSE OF SUPERIOR TRAITS.
  • Do you agree or disagree?

40
HOW DO ELITES MAINTAIN STRATIFICATION?
  • By force least effective.
  • Politically use laws and regulations
    (dictators)
  • Controlling information
  • Control the media
  • Selectively releasing or withholding information
    (ex in the interest of national security)
  • Using new technologies
  • Controlling ideas
  • The divine right of kings kings authority
    comes directly from God.

41
HOW DO THOSE NOT IN POWER FIGHT BACK?
  • Politically if in a democratic country
  • Judicial System
  • Terrorism
  • Using new technologies

42
HOW HAVE NATIONS BEEN STRATIFIED?
  • Colonialism Theory
  • Process by which one nation took over another
    nation
  • Dependency Theory
  • Stresses how the least industrialized nations
    grew dependent upon most industrialized
  • Culture of Poverty
  • Some nations are crippled by a way of life that
    perpetuates poverty

43
WHY DO SOME COUNTRIES REMAIN POOR OVER TIME?
  • Neocolonialism
  • Economic and political dominance over the least
    industrialized nations by the most industrialized
    nations
  • Multinational Corporations
  • Help to maintain global dominance

44
Social Class in the United States
45
DIMENSIONS OF SOCIAL INEQUALITY
  • Income- wages or salary from work and earnings
    from investments.
  • Wealth- the total value of money and other
    assets, minus outstanding debts.
  • Wealth includes stocks, bonds, and real estate
    is distributed even less equally than income.
  • Occupational Prestige
  • In addition to being a source of income, work
    also provides social prestige. We commonly
    evaluate each other according to the kind of work
    we do, respecting some and looking down on
    others.

46
RULE OF CUMULATION
  • If someone is economically wealthy, he or she
    probably also has a good education, good health,
    and secure employment.

47
Schooling
  • Industrial societies make schooling widely
    available to prepare workers for specialized
    tasks.
  • Schooling affects both occupation and income
  • A college degree or other advanced study is
    needed for most (but not all) of the
    better-paying white-collar jobs.
  • Most blue-collar jobs, which bring lower income
    and social prestige, require less schooling.

48
Ancestry
  • Family is our point of entry into the social
    system and has a strong bearing in schooling,
    occupation, and income.
  • Research suggests that at least half of our
    countrys richest individualsthose worth
    hundreds of millions of dollars or more derived
    their fortunes mostly from inheritance.

49
SOCIAL CLASSES IN THE USUPPER CLASS
  • The Upper Class
  • 5 of the population
  • Upper-Uppers
  • People who have inherited wealth are known as
    Blue Bloods or society ? Old Money
  • Includes less than 1 percent of society.
  • Lower-Uppers
  • Appear to be just as privileged but have newly
    acquired wealth, the main difference is that
    these people are the working rich. ? New Money

50
(No Transcript)
51
Middle Class
  • The Upper Middle Class (Professional)
  • 40-45 of the population
  • Upper-Middles
  • 80,000 to 160,000 a year
  • Middle Class
  • White Collar and Entrepreneurs
  • 40,000- 80,000 a year
  • Typically work in less prestigious white-collar
    occupations middle management, high-school
    teachers, and sales clerks, or in highly skilled
    blue-collar jobs, such as a building contractor.

52
  • The Working Class
  • Blue Collar
  • 25,000- 40,000 a year
  • 1/3 of the population
  • This population is somewhat below the national
    average, and they have little or no wealth.

53
Lower Class
  • Upper Lower
  • Unskilled Laborers
  • Low income makes this population unstable and
    insecure.
  • Lower Lower
  • Socially and Economically Disadvantaged
  • In 2000, the federal government classified 31.1
    million people as poor.

54
(No Transcript)
55
Middle Class Attitudes
  • 36 of those earning 15,000 a year call
    themselves middle class
  • 49 of those with incomes between 35,000 and
    49,999 call themselves middle class
  • 71 of those with incomes above 75,000 call
    themselves middle class

56
SOCIAL CLASS IN THE US
57
Housing
  • Number of families or primary individuals who
    live in mobile homes or trailers 6.8 million
  • Percentage change in the number of Americans
    living in mobile homes between 1980 and 1990
    52
  • Number of US households earning less than
    10,000/year 7.6 million
  • Number of affordable housing units available 4.4
    million
  • Number of gated communities in America approx.
    20,000 (housing approximately 8.4 million people)
  • Number of gated communities in 1950 2,500
  • Interesting Fact In 1995, homeowners earning
    more than 100,000 a year received a total of
    28.9 billion dollars in federal income tax
    deductions on mortgage interest payments. The
    entire 1996 budget of the US Department of
    Housing and Urban Development was only 19
    billion

58
The Difference Class Makes
  • Health
  • Children born into poor families are three times
    more likely to die from disease, neglect,
    accidents, or violence during their first years
    of life than children born to rich families.

59
  • Values
  • Affluent people with more college education and
    financial security are more tolerant of
    controversial behaviors such as homosexuality.
  • Working class people, who are use to greater
    supervision and discipline in their formative
    years and have less education, tend to be less
    tolerant.

60
  • Politics
  • In general, the more privileged people support
    the Republican Party and the people with fewer
    advantages support the Democrats.
  • A desire to protect their wealth prompts well-off
    people to be more conservative in economic
    issues, favoring lower taxes.
  • But on social issues such as abortion and
    feminist concerns, the more educated and affluent
    are more liberal.
  • People of lower social standing favor expanding
    government social programs, but support a more
    conservative social agenda.

61
  • Family and Gender
  • Most lower-class families are somewhat larger
    than middle class families because of earlier
    marriage and less use of birth control.

62
POVERTY IN THE US
63
  • The Extent of U.S. Poverty
  • The line of poverty is described as-the income
    needed to purchase a nutritionally adequate diet
    on the assumption that no more than a third of
    the family income is used for food.
  • 38.1 million Americans as of 2008
  • Below 18,000 a year for a three person family

64
  • Working poor are common
  • Federal Minimum Wage 7.25 (since 2008)
  • In tipping industry, wage is 2.13 with tips
    equaling 7.25
  • Do the math
  • 7.25 x 8hrs x 5 days x 52 weeks

65
(No Transcript)
66
Wealth and Poverty
  • US Median Household Income ? 40, 816 (as of
    1999)
  • Average Household Net Worth of Top 1 of Wage
    Earners ? 10,204,000
  • Average New Worth of Bottom 40 of Wage Earners ?
    1900

67
  • Definition of Middle Class in Terms of Income ?
    32,653 to 48,979 (as of 1999)
  • Percentage of US Children Who Live in Poverty ?
    20
  • Percentage of US Adults Who Live in Poverty ? 12
  • Percentage of Single Mothers Who Live in Poverty
    ? 37.4
  • Rank of the US among the seventeen leading
    industrial nation with the largest percentage of
    their populations in poverty ? 1
  • Portion of US stock owned by the wealthiest 10
    of Americans ? 9/10
  • Minimum Wage ? 7.25
  • Bill Gates hourly wage ? 650,000 / hr (1999,
    average since 1986)

68
(No Transcript)
69
(No Transcript)
70
Explaining Poverty
  • People counted among the officially poor in the
    United States are far better off than the poor in
    other countries.
  • Millions of people in the United States have too
    little income to lead healthy lives.
  • Almost 42 straddle the fence
  • Both government and individuals share this
    responsibility.

71
Whose to Blame?
  • Blame the Poor
  • This view sees society offering plenty of
    opportunity to anyone able and willing to take
    advantage of it. Thus, anyone who is poor either
    cannot or will not work.
  • Blame Society
  • Another position holds that society is primarily
    responsible for poverty.
  • Weighing the Evidence
  • Many people are idle not because they are
    avoiding work but because there are not enough
    jobs.

72
  • The Working Poor
  • The working poor command the sympathy and support
    of people on both sides of the poverty debate.
  • 20 of poor heads of households worked at least
    fifty weeks of the year and yet could not escape
    poverty.

73
GLOBAL STRATIFICATION
  • An Overview
  • The Extent of Poverty
  • Modernization Theory
  • Dependency Theory

74
High-Income Countries
  • About three-fourths of the people in high-income
    countries live in or near cities.
  • Production in rich nations is capital-intensive
    that is, it is based on factories, big machinery,
    and advanced technology.

75
Middle-Income Countries
  • Two-thirds of people live in cities, and
    industrial jobs are common. The remaining
    one-third of the people live in rural areas,
    where most are poor and lack access to schools,
    medical care, adequate housing, and even safe
    drinking water.

76
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
  • Low-income countries, where most people are very
    poor, are largely agrarian societies with some
    industry. Most of the sixty nations are in
    African and southern Asia. Low-income countries
    cover 28 percent of the planets land.
    Population density is high although it is
    greatest in Asian countries than in central
    African nations.

77
Severity of Poverty
  • Poverty in poor countries is more severe than it
    is in rich countries.

78
RELATIVE VERSUS ABSOLUTE POVERTY
  • People living in rich countries generally focus
    on relative poverty, some people lack resources
    that others take for granted. Relative poverty
    cuts across every society, rich or poor.
  • Absolute poverty, a lack of resources that is
    life threatening. Human beings in absolute
    poverty lack the nutrition necessary for health
    and long-term survival.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com