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Inequality & Stratification
Sociology 1301: Introduction to Sociology
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Inequality & Stratification
Plato: Every culture considers some type of inequality just. Social Inequality: uneven access to resources. Stratification: structured social inequality Four Principles: Social stratification is a trait of society, not simply a reflection of individual differences Social Stratification carries over from generation to generation Social stratification is universal but variable - found everywhere yet what is unequal and how unequal it is varies from one society to another Social stratification involves not just inequality but beliefs as well
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Equality 5 Types of Equality Social Equality Ontological Equality
Equality of Opportunity Equality of Condition Equality of Outcome
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Types of Social Stratification
Estate System (politically based) Caste System (religion based) Class System (family & economic based) Status Hierarchy System (prestige based) Elite-Mass Dichotomy System (governing elite) Meritocracy (personal merit)
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Capital Economic Capital (money) Social Capital (relationships)
Cultural Capital (knowledge) Human Capital (personal qualities)
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Conflict Theory This is the macro level theory that inequality exists as a result of political struggles among different groups in a particular society.
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Privilege & Oppression
Privilege: unearned access to resources (social power) only readily available to some people as a result of their advantaged social group membership. Oppression: the grouping of discrimination, personal bias, bigotry, and social prejudice in a complex web of relationships and structures that shape most aspects of life in our society.
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American Social Compact
Every society and culture posses a Social Compact, which is a combination of implicit and explicit sets of obligations of members of that society toward one another. The American Social Compact – has been slowly falling apart Provision #1: As companies in the private sector do better, workers should as well. Provision #2: Social Insurance through which Americans pooled their resources against the risk that any one of us - through illness or bad luck - might become impoverished. Provision #3: Promotion of good education. Why & how has the American Social Compact fallen apart?
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Theories of Inequality
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Inequality is bad Adam Ferguson & John Millar: Inequality is good Davis-Moore: Social stratification is beneficial Thomas Robert Malthus: Inequality is necessary to survival George Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Inequality brings us together and will ultimately go away
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Social Mobility Social Mobility: A change in position within the social hierarchy Status Consistency: The degree of uniformity in a person’s social standing across various dimensions of social inequality Systems of Social Mobility: Closed Systems: little change in social position Ex: Caste System Open Systems: Permit much more social mobility Ex: Meritocracy
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Social Justice vs. Diversity
Diversity: the state or fact of being diverse; difference; unlikeness. Social Justice: the process of examining the distribution of advantages and disadvantages within a society and the goal of equality. What does this have to do with Sociology?
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Works Cited Conley, D. (2008). You may ask yourself: An introduction to thinking like a sociologist. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. Henslin, J. M. (2008). Sociology: A down-to-earth approach (9th Ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson. Macionis, J. J. (2010). SOC100: Sociology: custom edition (13th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Custom Publishing. Massey, G. (Ed.) (2006). Readings for sociology (5th Ed.). New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
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