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Chapter 8 . Social Stratification. Learning Objectives. Explain the relationship between stratification and social class. Stratification- ranking of people or groups according to their unequal access to resources
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Chapter 8 Social Stratification
Explain the relationship between stratification and social class • Stratification- ranking of people or groups according to their unequal access to resources • Social Class- segment of society whose members hold similar amounts of resources and share values, norms, lifestyle
Each layer in a stratification system is a social class. • American stratification includes: upper, middle, and lower classes
Compare/Contrast the three dimensions of stratification 1. Economic - who has the money/who does not have the money • Wealth: having an abundance of resources (food, clothing) • Income: How much money one has 2. Power - ability to control others’ behavior 3. Prestige – recognition, respect, and admiration attached to positions (celebrities)
3 Different Theories • Functionalist • Most qualified people fit the positions • Teachers, bankers, doctors • Conflict • Differences exist because some people are willing to use other people (capitalists and workers) • Symbolic Interactionist • Social class is a result of talent and effort
Characteristics of American Social Classes • Upper Class • Middle Class • Working Class • Working Poor • Underclass
Upper Class • 1% of population • Upper upper class: old money families (Ford, Rockefeller, duPont) • Marry inside their class • Lower upper class: income but not friends • Molly Brown on Titanic
Middle Class • 40-50% of population • Upper middle class • Live well, save money • College degree and high career goals • Middle middle class • High school education
Working Class • 33% of population • Lower middle class • Manual labor- truck drivers, factory workers • Unstable employment • No health insurance • No opportunity to move up at work
Working Poor • 13% of population • Laborers and fast-food workers • Cannot earn enough money to save it
Underclass • 12% of population • Stay unemployed • Come from poor unemployed families • No education or skills • Physical and mental disabilities are common • Single parent families (moms)
Measuring Poverty in the US • Absolute Poverty- Not enough money for necessities of life (food, shelter) • Relative Poverty- Not enough money for extra materials of life (Playstation) • Government income for poverty in 2008 is $22,200 for a family of 4
Who are the Poor in the US? • Minorities • Females with children • Children under 18 • Elderly • Disabled • People who live alone
Poverty Programs in the US • 1960s President Johnson • War on Poverty • Welfare programs • 1998 government spent 3% of budget on welfare
Social Mobility in the US • Social mobility: movement of individuals between social classes • Types of mobility • Horizontal: change within same social class • Teacher to banker • Vertical: moving up or down • Normal to movie star • Intergenerational: change in status from one generation to the next • I become a movie star so my children are automatically famous too
How can you escape poverty? • Sweet Home Alabama • Social Mobility • Poverty Project