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Stratification and Society

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Differences between owners (upper class) and workers (lower class) ... Carly Fiorina -- HP. 21.5 million; forced out. Michael Eisner Disney. 10.1 million, forced out ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stratification and Society


1
Stratification and Society
  • Stratification in the US and the World

2
Origins of Class stratification
  • Marxs work is seen as the origins of the modern
    study of class stratification
  • Differences between owners (upper class) and
    workers (lower class)
  • Conflict between two competing classes
  • Lack of scarce resources

3
Caste System
  • Caste System no social mobility
  • Hereditary system of social rank
  • India
  • Brahman priests
  • Harijan - outcasts
  • Africa
  • Nigeria, Cameroon Religious caste system
  • Somali political nobility
  • Japan
  • Burakumin
  • Japanese social minority - Handout

4
Slavery and Class stratification
  • Slavery System limited social mobility
  • Mobility within the classes
  • Group of owners and slaves
  • Legal in some countries due to debt, indentured
  • India and Pakistan
  • Class system open social/economic mobility
  • United States
  • Based on individual success
  • Individual rights and responsibilities

5
U.S. Social Class System
  • Upper Class 1-2 3-6,000,000
  • Upper Middle 10-15
  • Middle 45-50
  • Lower Middle 25-30
  • Lower 20-25 -- 60-75,000,000
  • Becoming more stratified every decade

6
Distribution of wealth in the U.S.
  • In 2000 (56,200,000)
  • Top 20 -- 50 of the US income
  • Top 20 -- 85 of the US wealth
  • 2007
  • Median income 50,233
  • Fortune 2000 5.7 Million (2004)
  • Fortune 500 11.1 Million (2004)

7
2008 CEO Takehome
  • Average worker 54K (147 per day)
  • IAC (Interactive Corp) CEO
  • 295 million (808,219 per day)
  • Capital One 285 million
  • KB Homes 164 million
  • Pfizer 15.0 million
  • Aetna 35 million

8
Stratification in 2004
  • 99.5 -- 500,000 or less
  • 90 -- 100,000 or less
  • 70 -- 50,000 or less
  • 50 -- 30,000 or less (130,000,000)
  • .5 -- 500,000 or more
  • 9,677 individuals earn more than 10,000,000
    annually

9
Characteristics of Stratification
  • Social Inequality
  • the lack of access to housing, health care,
    education, employment opportunities, and status.
  • Based on perception of what you should have vs.
    what you actually have
  • Income
  • What we make
  • Wealth
  • What we are worth
  • All of these combined create stratification

10
Social Stratification
11
F.P.O.V.
  • Stratification provides structure
  • Provides goals and the means to achieve those
    goals
  • Talcott Parsons

12
Durkheim
  • Division of labor in society helps establish
    goals and structure for individuals
  • Stratification forms groups for social groups to
    attach themselves to
  • Similar goals and ideals associated with class
  • Roles associated with jobs
  • Integration
  • Solidarity
  • Reduces anomie

13
Weber
  • Class position equaled power position
  • Each social class has their own distinctive life
    style and various views
  • Class system was established to allow men to
    achieve more
  • Made up of multiple things
  • Occupancy, schooling, speech, recreational
    habits, spending

14
Talcott Parsons
  • The class system is a response to norms and
    values
  • Rewards legitimize the system
  • Defense to the American Culture
  • Success is based on the individual
  • Structural Functionalism

15
C.P.O.V
  • Stratification based on exploitation of workers
  • The class system will only continue to benefit
    those that operate on the top
  • Stratification causes tension that will
    ultimately create a rebellion
  • Income and wealth will go to those who with the
    most control
  • Those on the bottom will continue to make less
    and less over time

16
Marx
  • Stratification ultimately creates conflict and
    struggle
  • The have nots rise up against the haves
  • Class is constructed of two differing groups
  • Proletariat owners of labor, no other resources
    than their own labor
  • Bourgeoisie owners of the means of production

17
Marx
18
Marx vs. Weber
  • Marx was a economic determinist
  • The relationship between the owners and workers
    was the most important
  • It was all about property, lack of ownership of
    property forced those to work for low wages
  • Owners exploited workers for profit
  • Weber focused on a combination of three things
  • Power people do what you want
  • Prestige people look up to you
  • Property what you own

19
Stratification by Social Class
Measuring Social Class
  • Table 5-1 Prestige Rankings of Occupations

(Continued on next slide)
Sources J.A. Davis et al. 2003 Nakao and Treas
1990, 1994 NORC 1994.
20
Gap Stats
  • 1990s
  • Bottom 20 -- 5.6 of national income
  • Top 20 -- 46 of national income
  • 1972-2001 income levels
  • Bottom 20 grew by 3
  • Top 1 income grew by 187
  • Top 1 own 2X more than 15 years before

21
Money for nothing,
  • Median CEO bonus for 2003
  • 4.4 million
  • Median bonus for 2003
  • 710,000
  • Carly Fiorina -- HP
  • 21.5 million forced out
  • Michael Eisner Disney
  • 10.1 million, forced out

22
Changing CEO Pay
23
Net Wealth in the US
24
Wealth by Race -- 2000
25
CEO pay in the US
26
I.P.O.V.
  • How does Interactionism explain stratification
  • The influence of class
  • Actions we take create our class
  • Common belief system
  • Community of common ideals
  • Differences between the classes

27
Understanding Key ideas
  • Poverty
  • Absolute
  • 20618/4 (2006)
  • 10294/1 (2006)
  • Relative perception of those around you,
    comparative statement
  • Feminization of poverty
  • Social factors that increase this number
  • Unemployment

28
Global Stratification
  • Colonialism Decolonialism
  • Development Project
  • US Modernization Project
  • USSR - Development
  • World Systems Theory - Wallerstein
  • Dependency Theory - Frank
  • Evolution into the Globalization Project.

29
Colonialism
  • The physical and psychological subjugation of one
    nation over another
  • Used military and technological superiority t
    maintain control over impoverished nations
  • European nations that had colonized non-European
    nations for natural resources and labor
  • United Kingdom Africa, Australia, South America
  • France Large portions of Africa

30
Colonialism Pre-WWII
31
Colonies of Great Britain
32
Colonies of France
33
Spanish Colonies
34
De-colonization
  • Former colonies were able to regain their freedom
  • Finished after WWII, European countries were
    ravaged from the destruction of the war
  • European colonizers were not able to maintain
    their hold on their colonies
  • Third world countries were now independent and
    able to compete in the world market

35
Development For the US
  • US Capitalism - Individual
  • Free market enterprise Jeremy Bentham
  • Everyone working towards individual happiness
    will ultimately benefit all
  • Market investment
  • Individual consumption
  • Private property
  • Industrial advancement
  • High division of labor

36
Development for the USSR
  • USSR Communism - Collective
  • Centrally planned social organization
  • Government controlled everything
  • Squeezed peasants for labor and food
  • Emerged out of the works of Marx and Engels
  • From each his own ability to each his own need
  • Central and state planning
  • Socialist state
  • Low division of labor

37
Modernization project
  • A functionalist approach to improving the world
    by modernizing others.
  • Using the European and American model of
    development
  • Being modern meant being European/American
  • Lead by Talcott Parsons and W.W. Rostow

38
Praxis of Modernization
  • Talcott Parsons
  • Popular against the defense of Communism
  • Legitimized the US and its culture
  • Individual success
  • Theory of modernization
  • W.W. Rostow
  • Five stages of economic growth
  • Plan of modernization

39
Rostows non-communist manifesto
  • Traditional Society
  • Preconditions for takeoff
  • Takeoff
  • Drive to Maturity
  • Age of Mass Consumption

40
Development Project
  • Post WWII
  • Decolonization peaks
  • The attempt of the Soviet Union and the United
    States to develop the world in their own
    likenesses
  • Soviet Union - Marx
  • Central and State planning
  • United States _ Bentham
  • Free Market
  • Utilitarianism

41
Development Begins
  • After WWII, both nations used their superior
    economy and technology to convert third world
    nations
  • Leap-frogging each other for 20 years rebuilding
    nations in their own likeness
  • Using money to entice nations to convert
  • Former colonies needed money to jumpstart their
    economy and would take it from either source

42
Development cont
  • Third world nations were feeding off of US and
    USSR for resources
  • US tried to stay ahead of USSR throughout Europe
  • USSR began to convert many Eastern European
    nations
  • Struggle to stay ahead

43
Battle in the East
  • Conflict begins in Vietnam -1959 - 1974
  • North (Communist)
  • South (Capitalist)

44
End of an Era
  • Modernization project comes to an end as US
    forces are sent home
  • Crisis in US for civil rights, equal rights,
    environmental rights, worker rights, etc began to
    challenge the idea that the system works equally
    for everyone
  • US economy began to slow

45
World Systems/Dependency Theory
  • Immanuel Wallerstein
  • Andre Gunther Frank
  • Argument against the modernization project
  • Based in Latin America
  • Answered the question as to why the world can not
    keep up.

46
Globalization
  • The class system on a global scale
  • The attempt to create a global market where each
    nation plays a role
  • Develop niche markets for various nations
  • The world becomes intertwined economically and
    socially
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