Social Strata
Social Strata
Social Strata
STRATIFICATION
LEARNING OUTLINE
1. INTRODUCTION
• Definitions
• Origin
• Causes
• Characteristics
2. IMPACTS OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
3. FORMS OF STRATIFICATION
LEARNING OUTLINE
5. POVERTY
6. SOURCES OF STRATIFICATION
• Structural-Functionalist Perspectives
• Social conflict Perspectives
• Multidimensional Perspectives
7. MAINTAINING STRATIFICATION
8. SOCIAL MOBILITY
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
Social stratification is a term used in the social
sciences to describe:
the relative social position of persons
Industrialized Societies
Postindustrial Societies
CAUSES OF SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
2. Stratification is social
3. It is ancient
4. It is in diverse forms
o Health sector.
o Education.
o Societal laws.
o VIP culture
o Language Conflicts
o Stereotyping
o Labialization
o Punishment amplification
o Traffic rules
o Banks policies
o Discrimination in journalism
WHOM WILL LIVE OR DIE
o At time of flood protection of major cities
For example :
Sinking titanic
FORMS OF STRATIFICATION
who is poor?
Years 1967–2003
Cont’d
Cont’d
In 2003, the poverty
threshold for a family of four (consisting of two
adults and two children) was $18,660. By these
official definitions, 35.8 million Americans (or 12.5
percent) lived in poverty in 2003 (U.S. Census
Bureau 2004b).
Most people define poverty in non-numerical terms
based on their personal circumstances. They are
using a relative definition of poverty, measuring it
on the basis of whether their basic needs and wants
are met.
Breyer and Hudson
• Costs are also more than financial. The poor face a bigger time
squeeze than the affluent.
• They face trade-offs in demands between work and family life.
• This dilemma includes time to monitor their children’s educational
needs (e.g., supervised study time)
• Income and poverty are unequally distributed by such factors as
race and sex.
• Not all groups have an equivalent chance of being poor.
Poverty by race
For example, hard feeling may result among those who work hard
yet are treated unfairly or feel they are not properly rewarded for
their efforts.
Herbert Gans
Sociologist Herbert Gans (2001), analyzed the functions of poverty.
• He described 13 functions the poor play in society.
• The poor ensure that society’s “dirty work” gets done, their
existence creates jobs that serve the poor
• (e.g., social-service workers, shelter providers), and the poor buy
goods others do not want (e.g., day-old bread, used clothing and
vehicles).
• The poor also absorb the costs of social change
Cont’d
Gans says that his analysis does not mean that poverty must, or should,
Exist
• He argues that a “functional analysis must conclude that poverty
persists not only because it fulfills a number of positive functions
but also because many of the functional alternatives to poverty
would be quite dysfunctional for the affluent members of society”
• He also uses his analysis to show that functionalism, accused by
critics of being inherently conservative, can be used in more liberal
and radical analyses.
STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM:
Emile Durkheim:
(1858-1917)
STRUCTURAL FUNCTIONALISM:
“This perspective views society as a
complex system of interrelated parts that
work together to maintain stability.”
According to this perspective:
Social system’s parts are interdependent.
2. Status
3. Power
MAINTAINING STRATIFICATION
Stratification is influenced by ascribed statuses such
as race, ethnic background, gender and age. We are
born with these statuses and despite our personal
efforts and achievements, they impact our lifestyle
and life chances. Prejudices and Discrimination
based on these ascribed statuses serve to justify and
maintain systems of stratification.
“Prejudice is a preconceived and irrational attitude
toward people based on their group membership.”
It is inflexible and not based on direct evidence or
contact. Prejudices can take the form of positive or
negative attitudes toward a group, but the term often
used with a negative connotation.
EUGENE HARTLEY
Express the reaction to various minorities groups
Prejudice against actual racial and ethnic groups
EXAMPLE
A person who moves from a managerial position in
one company to a similar position in another.
VERTICAL MOBILITY
If, however, the move involves a change in social
class, it is called “vertical mobility” and involves
either “upward mobility” or “downward mobility”.
EXAMPLE
An industrial worker who becomes a wealthy
businessman moves upward in the class system, a
landed aristocrat who loses everything in a
revolution moves downward in the system.
TYPES OF MOBILITY
Mobility can be examined by how much time it takes to
occur:
Intragenerational mobility
Intergenerational mobility
Positional mobility
INTRAGENERATIONAL MOBILITY
Intragenerational mobility is movement that occurs
within the lifetime of an individual.
EXAMPLE
EXAMPLE
EXAMPLE