Basic Concepts on Social Stratification
Basic Concepts on Social Stratification
Kerbo, Harold R. 2006. Social Stratification and Inequality: Class conflict in historical, comparative, and global perspective. Boston: McGraw Hill. Pp. 9-12
1. Social Stratification and Inequality
Social Differentiation … “occurs … when we find people with distinct individual qualities and social roles.” “An increased division of labor means more differentiation.”
Social Inequality … “is the condition whereby people have unequal access to valued resources, services, and positions in society.”
“Social inequality often emerges from social differentiation for two basic reasons.”
(1) “…because of the human capacity to apply meaning to events and things, to develop judgments of what is ‘good,’ ‘bad,’ or preferable, social evaluation is often applied to differences.
(2) “…some roles of social positions place some people in a position to acquire a greater share of valued goods and services.”
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‘Theoretically,’ there can be “social inequality without social differentiation.” However, that’s purely theoretical. Historically, social inequality has always derived from social differentiation.
Social Stratification “means that inequality has been hardened or institutionalized, and there is a system of social relationships that determines who gets what, and why.”
“Institutionalized” means that “a system of layered hierarchy has been established.”
So, social stratification is a specific form of social inequality.
Ascription: “Class or strata placement is primarily hereditary.”
Achievement: “Class or strata placement is due primarily to qualities that can be controlled by individuals.”
Ex) David Rockefeller was born with a silver spoon in his mouth (Ascription), but he also might have tried hard to become a best businessman (Achievement).
2. Class Divisions and Social Mobility
Class: “a grouping of individuals with similar positions and similar political and economic interests within the stratification system.”
Three Main Criteria of Class Divisions
A person’s position in …
(1) Occupational Structure: Ex) a cleaner and an accountant
(2) Authority Structure: “how may people a person must take orders from vs. how many people a person can give orders to”
(3) Property Structure: “the ownership of property that produces profit, such as stock ownership”
American Class Structure according to Kerbo’s terms
1) Upper Class: “families high in property ownership, with high authority flowing form such ownership.” Ex: the Rockefellers, the Fords … and the Bushes?
2) Corporate Class: “people with high authority and power in major corporations (and often government), usually without extensive ownership in these corporations”
3) Middle Class: “those with relatively little property, but high to middle positions in occupation (nonmanual labor) and authority”
4) Working Class: “people with little or no property, middle to low positions in occupation (manual labor), and little or no authority”
5) Lower Class: “those individuals with no property, who are often unemployed and have no authority”
Status is a “rather ambiguous term … used to indicate positions in a social structure” or “something like position within a hierarchy.” The criterion of “status” consists of “occupational prestige, or the popularly ranked esteem and respect associated with high to low occupational attainment.”
Social Mobility: “individual or group movement within the class system”
-Vertical Mobility: “the movement of individuals up and down the class system”
-Horizontal Mobility: “movement across positions of roughly equal rank”
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Social Stratification
Inequality
Vertical “Inequality”
Higher positions (Ex: landlord, general)
Lower positions (Ex: serf, private)
Horizontal “differentiation” of functions, or jobs (Ex: farmer, soldier)
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