sociology chapter 7 outline
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 7 Outline
Introduction
Stratification is systematic inequalities between groups of people that arise as intended orunintended consequences of social processes and relationships.
Views of Inequality
In the eighteenth century, Jean-Jacques Rousseau argued that private property createssocial inequality and that this inequality ultimately leads to social conflict.
The Scottish Enlightenment thinkers Adam Ferguson and John Millar agreed with Rousseauthat private property creates inequality, but they argued that this is good because it means
that some people prosper and create assets (a form of wealth that can be stored for the
future). The ability to create assets provides an incentive to work hard and be productive,
which in turn leads to higher degrees of social organization and efficiency and ultimately to an
improved society and civilization. The irony, however, is that this ability to create and storesurpluses is what creates inequality.
Thomas Malthus also viewed inequality favorably, but only as a means for controllingpopulation growth. He thought that a more equal distribution of resources would increase the
worlds population to unsustainable levels and ultimately bring about mass starvation and
conflict.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegelsmasterslave dialectic posited that most socialrelationships in the world were based on a masterslave model in which the master becomes
as dependent on the slave as the slave is on the master. Hegel also believed that over time
society would have more and more free people and the masterslave model would die out as
the primary social relationship.
Standards of Equality
Ontological equality is the notion that everyone is created equal in the eyes of God. Equality of opportunity is the idea that inequality of condition is acceptable so long as
everyone has the same opportunities for advancement and is judged by the same standards.
This standard of equality is most closely associated with modern capitalist society and a
cornerstone of arguments made by civil rights activists in the United States in the 1960s.
Equality of condition is the idea that everyone should have an equal starting point fromwhich to pursue his or her goals. Belief in this standard of equality has led to policies, such as
affirmative action, which try to compensate social actors for differences in their conditions or
starting points.
Equality of outcome is the notion that everyone in a society should end up with the samerewards regardless of his or her starting point, opportunities, or contributions. This standard
of equality is most closely associated with Communist ideology, and critics argue that without
greater incentives to work hard and be productive, people will slack off and social progress will
be stymied.
Forms of Stratification
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The estate system is a politically based system of stratification characterized by limited socialmobility that is best exemplified in the social organization of feudal Europe and the preCivil
War American South.
The caste system is a system of stratification based on hereditary notions of religious andtheological purity and generally offers no prospects for social mobility. The varna system in
India is the most common example today of a caste system. The class system is an economically based system of stratification characterized by
somewhat loose social mobility and categories based on roles in the production process rather
than individual characteristics.
Karl Marx felt that society was divided strictly into two classesthe proletariat, or workingclass, and the bourgeoisie, or employing class. Erik Olin Wright developed the concept of
contradictory class locations, which is the idea that people can occupy locations in the
class structure that fall between the two pure classes defined by Marx.
It can be difficult to define class because class means different things to different people andbecause people dont always fit neatly into just one category.
Max Webers concept of class is based on grouping people according to the value of theirproperty or labor in the commercial marketplace.
The status hierarchy system is a system of stratification based on social prestige. Thisprestige can be linked to different thingsoccupation, lifestyle, membership in certain
organizationsbut sociologists have most often studied occupational status.
The elitemass dichotomy system is a system of stratification that has a governing eliteafew leaders who broadly hold the power of society. Vilfredo Pareto thought that the masses
were better off in such a system because the most skilled and talented people would reach the
governing elite. C. Wright Mills viewed this system as dangerous and detrimental as it
consolidates power in the hands of the few who will act according to their interests as opposed
to the interests of the masses.
How Is America Stratified Today?
Socioeconomic statusrefers to an individuals position in a stratified social order. In the United States, the upper class is associated with income, wealth, power, and prestige,
but definitions related to specific levels of income or net worth can vary.
There is little consensus about how to define the middle class, yet almost 90 percent ofAmericans define themselves as being in the middle class. A further complication is how to
separate middle class from working class.
The middle class has historically been composed of white-collar workers, and the working classof manual laborers. However, in the postWorld War II economic boom, the working class
essentially merged with the middle class. Higher wages gave manual laborers access to
markers of middle-class achievement such as home ownership, providing their children with a
college education, and an ample retirements savings. Another major change in the workforce that has blurred the lines between the middle and
working classes is the rise of the low-wage service sector composed of ostensibly white-collar
jobs that earn working-class wages.
The income gap between high-income and low-income individuals has increased dramaticallyover the last 30 years; a number of competing theories exist as to why this has happened.
Poverty has an official, government definition, but there are less official categories such asthe working poor and the nonworking poor (sometimes called the underclass). These unofficial
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categories dont represent stable, homogenous groups because people at this end of the
socioeconomic spectrum tend to shift in and out of poverty over the course of their lives.
Global Inequality
Taking a broad view of history, it is clear that global inequality has increased dramatically inthe past 500 years. However, by some measures there has been a noticeable decrease inincome inequality in the past 20 to 30 years. One key to these conclusions is whether you look
at inequality within different countries or between countries.
Many scholars have examined the question of why Europe developed first and why manyformer colonies have struggled to improve social and economic conditions for their
populations. Theories range from geographic differences to the importance of social
institutions to the types of relationships different colonial powers had with their colonies.
Social Reproduction versus Social Mobility
Social mobility, the movement between different positions within a system of socialstratification in any given society, can be either horizontal or vertical and can take place on
the individual or group level.
Structural mobility is mobility that is inevitable from changes in the economy such as theexpansion of high-tech jobs in the past 20 years. Exchange mobility occurs when people
essentially trade positionsthe number of overall jobs stays the same, with some people
moving up into better jobs and others moving down into worse ones.
A mobility table is a way to examine the process of individual mobility by comparing changesin occupational status between generations.
A status-attainment model also looks at changes in occupational status betweengenerations, but it includes factors such as educational attainment, income, and the prestige
of a persons first job.
The estate tax in the United States is related to the issue of stratification because it goes tothe heart of questions about how to promote business growth, how wealth should be
distributed, how to encourage meritocracy, and how to build a more equitable society.