Sociology Ch. 8: Stratification, Class, and Inequality

Status

The social honor or prestige a group is accorded by other members of a society. Status groups normally display distinct styles of life--patterns of behavior that the members of a group follow. Status privilege may be positive or negative.

Social stratification

The existence of structured inequalities between groups in society, in terms of their access to material or symbolic rewards. While all societies involve some forms of stratification, only with the development of state-based systems did wide differences in wealth and power arise. Most distinctive form of stratification in modern societies is class divisions.

Structured inequalities

Social inequalities that result from patterns in the social structure

Slavery

A form of social stratification in which some people are literally owned by others as their property

Caste system

A social system in which one's social status is given for life

Class

Although it is one of the most frequently used concepts in sociology, there is no clear agreement about its definition. Most sociologists use the term to refer to socioeconomic variations between groups of individuals that create variations in their material prosperity and power

Life chances

A term introduced by Max Weber to signify a person's opportunities for achieving economic prosperity

Kuznets curve

A formula showing that inequality increases during the early stages of capitalist development, then declines, and eventually stabilizes at a relatively low level; advanced by the economist Simon Kuznets

Income

Payment, usually derived from wages, salaries, or investments

Wealth

Money and material possessions held by an individual or group

Upper class

A social class broadly composed of the more affluent members of society, especially those who have inherited wealth, own businesses, or hold large numbers of stocks (shares)

Middle class

A social class composed broadly of those working in white-collar and lower managerial occupations

Working class

A social class broadly composed of people working in blue-collar, or manual, occupations

Lower class

A social class comprised of those who work part time or not at all and whose household income is typically lower than $30,000 a year

Underclass

A class of individuals situated at the bottom of the class system, normally composed of people from ethnic minority backgrounds

Social Mobility

Movement of individuals or groups between different social positions

Intragenerational mobility

Movement up or down a social stratification hierarchy within the course of a personal career

Intergenerational mobility

Movement up or down a social stratification hierarchy from one generation to another

Exchange mobility

The exchange of positions on the socioeconomic scale such that talented people move up the economic hierarchy while the less talented move down

Structural mobility

Mobility resulting from changes in the number and kinds of jobs available in a society

Industrialism hypothesis

Theory that societies become more open to social mobility as they become more industrialized

Ascription

Placement in a particular social status based on characteristics such as family of origin, race, and gender

Vertical mobility

Movement up or down a hierarchy of positions in a social stratification system

Absolute poverty

The minimal requirements necessary to sustain a healthy existence

Relative poverty

Poverty defined according to the living standards of the majority in any given society

Poverty line

An official government measure to define those living in poverty in the United States

Working poor

People who work, but whose earnings are not enough to lift them above the poverty line

Feminization of poverty

An increase in the proportion of the poor who are female

Culture of poverty

The thesis, popularized by Oscar Lewis, that poverty is not a result of individual inadequacies but is instead the outcome of a larger social and cultural atmosphere into which successive generations of children are socialized. The culture of poverty refers to the values, beliefs, lifestyles, habits, and traditions that are common among people living under conditions of material deprivation

Dependency culture

A term popularized by Charles Murray to describe individuals who rely on state welfare provision rather than entering the labor market. The dependency culture is seen as the outcome of the "paternalistic" welfare state that undermines individual ambition and people's capacity for self-help.

Social exclusion

The outcome of multiple deprivations that prevent individuals or groups from participating fully in the economic, social, and political life of the society in which they live

Homeless

People who have no place to sleep and either stay in free shelters or sleep in public places not meant for habitation

Means of production

The means whereby the production of material goods is carried on in a society, including not just technology but the social relations between producers

Capitalists

People who own companies, land, or stocks (shares) and use these to generate economic returns

Surplus value

The value of a worker's labor power, in Marxist theory, left over when an employer has repaid the cost of hiring the worker

Pariah groups

Groups who suffer from negative status discrimination--they are looked down on by most other members of society. The Jews, for example, have been a pariah group throughout much of European history

Contradictory class locations

Positions in the class structure, particularly routine white-collar and lower managerial jobs, that share characteristics of the class positions both above and below them

Social closure

Practices by which groups separate themselves from other groups