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Class and Stratification

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Class and Stratification What is Stratification? Stratification in Historical Perspective Stratification in Modern Western Societies Poverty and Inequality – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Class and Stratification


1
Class and Stratification
  • What is Stratification?
  • Stratification in Historical Perspective
  • Stratification in Modern Western Societies
  • Poverty and Inequality
  • Social Mobility

2
What is Stratification?
  • Stratification is the system of structured
    inequalities among different groups of people
  • Structured gt stratification persists across
    generations
  • Inequality gt differential access to scarce
    resources
  • Wealth
  • Income
  • Power
  • Prestige
  • Different groups gt access to scarce resources
    varies systematically by class, gender, age, race
    and ethnicity

3
Stratification by Class, Gender, Age, Race and
Ethnicity
  • Is concerned with the ways in which inequalities
    are distributed within societies
  • Answers the question
  • Who gets what and why?

4
Stratification by Class Asks
  • How equal are modern societies?
  • How much of a chance does someone have of
    reaching the top of the economic ladder?
  • Why is there persistent poverty in affluent
    societies?

5
How Equal are Modern Societies?
  • This research addresses such issues as
  • Class structure
  • Distribution of wealth
  • Distribution of income
  • Equality of opportunity

6
Chance of reaching top of economic ladder?
  • This research addresses such issues as
  • Social mobility
  • Does a society have a closed or open
    stratification system?

7
Why is there persistent poverty in affluent
societies?
  • This research addresses such issues as
  • Poverty
  • Homelessness
  • Unemployment

8
Stratification in Historical Context
  • Stratification is found everywhere
  • Four basic systems of stratification
  • Slavery
  • Caste
  • Estate
  • Class

9
Compared to other systems, class systems (at
least in principle) are
  • Fluid
  • Based on achievement
  • Economically-based

10
Stratification in Modern Western Societies
  • Class is basis of stratification
  • Chief bases of class differences are ownership of
    wealth and occupation

11
Industrialization and the Labor Force
  • Increase in occupational specialization
  • Changes in proportions of labor force in
    different sectors of the economy
  • Changes in proportions of labor force in
    different types of occupations
  • Increased employment of women outside the home

12
Classifying Occupations by Industry Sector
  • Primary sector
  • Part of the economy that generates raw materials
    directly from the environment
  • Secondary sector
  • Part of the economy that transforms raw materials
    into manufactured goods
  • Tertiary sector
  • Part of the economy that generates services
    rather than goods

13
Classifying Occupations by Occupational Type
  • Agricultural/farm occupations
  • Blue-collar occupations
  • Prestige?
  • Link with class structure?
  • White-collar occupations
  • Prestige?
  • Link with class structure?

14
Increased Employment of Women Outside the Home
  • of women in labor force
  • 1901
  • 1998
  • of labor force who are women
  • 1901
  • 1998

15
Class Structure of Canada
  • Upper class
  • Upper-uppers
  • Lower-uppers
  • Middle class
  • Working class
  • Lower class
  • Poor
  • Working poor

16
Distribution of Wealth
  • Canada
  • United States

17
Policy Implications
  • Success of government programs to transfer and
    redistribute income?
  • Canada
  • United States

18
Poverty and Inequality
  • Relative poverty
  • What is it?
  • Absolute poverty
  • What is it?
  • How used in policy debates?

19
Who is at Risk of being Poor in Canada?
  • Children
  • Women
  • Certain visible minorities
  • People living in rural areas

20
Debate Over Poverty
  • Focus
  • Competing positions
  • Poor are largely responsible for their own
    poverty
  • Poverty is caused unequal distribution of
    resources in society
  • Link with debate over causes of homelessness

21
Social Mobility
  • Movement of individuals and groups between strata
    in the class hierarchy
  • Vertical mobility movement up or down the class
    hierarchy
  • Upward mobility
  • Downward mobility
  • Link with lateral mobility

22
Sociologists study social mobility by
  • Looking at individuals' own careers and seeing
    how far they move up or down the socioeconomic
    scale in the course of their own working lives
  • Intragenerational mobility
  • Exploring where children are on the socioeconomic
    scale compared to their parents or grandparents
  • Intergenerational mobility

23
Most general concern
  • Do individuals born into the lower strata of
    society have opportunities to move up?
  • Why?

24
Sociologists explore social mobility by studying
occupational shifts
  • Within an individual's career or between
    generations
  • Occupational composition of the labor force
    affects intragenerational mobility and
    intergenerational mobility
  • Why?

25
Changes in the proportions of white-collar and
blue-collar occupations
  • Suggest that over time Canada has become less
    unequal
  • Suggest that opportunities for social mobility
    are increasing
  • Why?
  • But aggregate patterns may be misleading

26
Research outside Canada
  • Shows that much of white-collar growth has
    occurred in lower positions
  • Sales clerks, typists, file clerks
  • Similar to working class occupations in terms of
    income, work activities and power
  • Sociologists talk about a "new working class"
  • Low-paid, semi-skilled, white-collar workers
  • Did this happen in Canada?

27
Comparative research on Western societies has
found
  • Children gain or lose chances of success because
    of family background
  • Most vertical mobility is between occupations
    that are quite close to one another
  • Downward mobility is less common than upward
    mobility but is still widespread
  • Levels of social mobility are low compared to
    ideals of equality of opportunity

28
Education is key to upward mobility
  • Many jobs require high school completion as a
    minimum condition
  • Since 1990 number of jobs requiring a university
    degree or post-secondary diploma increased by 1.3
    million

29
Compared to Canadians with less education,
university graduates
  • Hold a higher proportion of upper white-collar
    jobs
  • Are less likely to be unemployed
  • Are less likely to remain unemployed if lose job
  • Are more likely to earn higher salaries

30
In Canada
  • Is there equal opportunity for all Canadians to
    acquire education (assuming they have the ability
    and motivation to do so)?
  • Do decisions about funding higher education
    affect equality of access?

31
Theorizing Stratification by Class
  • Structural-functional paradigm
  • Social inequality plays an important role in the
    operation of society
  • Davis-Moore hypothesis
  • Social conflict paradigm
  • Stratification benefits some people at the
    expense of others
  • Marx's critique of capitalism
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