Vocabulary for Sociology Test 3
Terms
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- Social Stratification
- refers to the way society is organized in layers of strata
- income
- what you earn in a given period
- poor rich
- these people earn more than $100,000 a year and still are stuggling to get by
- Vetical Social mobility
- refers to movement up or down the stratification system
- Global Inequality
- refers to differences in the economic ranking of countries
- Crossnational Variations in the internal stratification
- differences between countries in their stratification systems
- Gini Index
- a measure of income inequality. its value rranges form zero (which means that each household earns exactly the same amount) to 1 (which means that all income is earned by a single household)
- ascription-based
- stratification system is one in which the allocation of rank depends on the characteristics a person is born with
- achievment-based
- stratificaiton system is one in which the allocation of rank depends on a persons accomplishments
- caste system
- an almost pure ascription-based stratification system in which occupation and marriage partners are assigned on the basis of caste membership
- Apartheid
- was a caste system based on race that exsited in South Africa from 1948 until 1992. It cosigned the large black majority to menial jobs, prevented marriage between blacks and whites, and erected seperate public facilities from members of the two races. Asians and people of "mixed race" enjoyed privilages between the two extremes
- Feudalism
- a legal arrangment in preindustrial Europe that bound peasants tot he land and obliged them to give their landlords a set of the harvest. In exchange, landlords were required to protect peasants form marauders and open their storehouses and feed the peasants if crops failed
- Bourgeoisie
- owners of the means of production, including factories, tools and land. they do not do any physical labor. Their income derives from profits.
- Proletariat
- in Marx's usage, is the working class members of the proletariat perform physical labor but do not own means of production. The are thus in a position to earn wages.
- Petty Bourgeoisie
- in Marx's usage, is the clsas of small-scale capitalists who own means of production but employ only a few workers or none at all, forcing them to do physical work themselves.
- Core
- capitalist countries are rich countries, such as the US, Japan, and Germany, that are the major sources of capital and technology in the world
- Peripheral
- Countries are fomer colonies that are poor and are major sources of raw materials and cheap labor
- Semiperipheral
- countries, such as South Korea, Taiwan, and Israel, consist of former colonies that are making considerable headway in their attempts to industrialize
- Neoliberal Globalization
- the policy that promotes private contorl of industry, minimal governement interference in the running of the economy, the removal of taxes, tariffs, and restrictive regulations that discourage the international buying and selling of goods and servives, and the encouragement of foreign investment
- Prejudice
- and attitude that judges a persons on his or her groups real or imagined characteristics
- Discrimination
- unfair treatment of people due to their group membership
- race
- is a social construct used to distinguish people in terms of one or more physical markers, usually with profound effects on their lives
- scapegoat
- a disadvantaged person or category of people whom others blame for their own problems
- ethnic group
- composed of people whose perceived cultural markers are deemed socially significant. ethnic groups differ form one another in terms of language, religion, customs, values, ancestors and the like
- Minority Group
- a group of people who are socially disadvantaged although they may be in the numerical majority
- Ethnich Enclave
- a spatial concentration of ethnic group members who establish businesses that serve and emply mainly members of the ethnich group and reinvest profits in the community businesses and organizations
- symbolic ethnicity
- a nostalgic allegiance to the culture of the immigrant generation or that of the old country that is not usually incorporated in everday behavior
- Racism
- the belief that a visible characteristic of a group such as skin color, indicates group inferiority and justifies discrimination
- institutional racism
- bias that is inherent in social institutions and is often not noticed by member of the majority group
- ecological theory
- ethnic succession argues that ethnic groups pass through five stages in their struggle for teritory, invasion, resistance, competition, accommodation, and cooperation and assimilation
- internal colonialism
- incvolves one race or ethnic group subjugating another in teh same country. it prevents assimilation by segregating the subordinate group in terms of jobs, housing, and social contacts
- Split Labor markets
- low wage workers of one race and high-wage workers of another race compete for the same job. High-wage workers are likely to resent the presence of low-wage comptitors, and conflict is bound to result. consequently, racist attitudes develop or get reinforced
- Expulsion
- the forcible removal of a population from a teritory claimed by another population
- Genocide
- the international extermination of an entire population defined as a "race" or a "people"
- slavery
- the ownership and control of people
- Transnational communities
- communities whose boundaries extend between countries
- Hate Crimes
- criminal acts motivated by a persons race, religion, or ethnicity
- Affirmative action
- a policy that gives preference to minority group members if equally qualified people are avallable for a position
- Pluralism
- the retention of racial and ethnic culture combined with equal access to basic social resources
- Family
- people who consider themselves related by blood, marriage, or adoption
- Household
- people who occupy the same houseing unit
- nuclear family
- consists of a cohabiting man and woman who maintain a socially approved sexual relationship and have at least one child
- Traditional Nuclear Family
- a nuclear family in which the husband works outside the home for money and hte wife works for free in the home
- Polyandry
- a marriage in which a woman has more than one husband
- Polygyny
- marriage in which a man has more than one wife
- Polygamy
- expands the nuclear family "horizontally" by adding one or more spouses (usually women) to the household
- Extended family
- expands the nuclear family "vertically" by adding another generation- one or more of the spouses parents- to the household
- Marriage
- a socially approved, presumably longterm, sexual and economic union between a man and a woman. It involves reciprocal rights and obligations between spouses and between parents and children
- Divorce Rate
- the number of divorces that occur in a year for every 1000 people in the population
- Marriage rate
- the number of marriages that occur in a year for every 1000 people in a population
- total fertility rate
- the average number of children that would be born to a woman over her lifetime if she had the same number of child as a woman in each age cohort in a given year.
- Five main functions of marriage and the Nuclear Family
- 1) sexual regulation 2) Economic cooperation 3) Reproduction 4) socialization 5) emotional support
- Who you will Fall in Love with-
- 1)marriage resources- include financial assets, status, values, tastes, and knowledge 2)Third Parties- varying degrees, families, neighborhoods, communitities, and religous institutions -who you fall in love with is determined by the influence of such third parites 3) Demographic and Compositional Factors
- 5 main factors underlying Marital Satisfaction
- 1) Economic Forces 2) Divorce Laws 3) Family Life circle 4)Housework and child care 5)Sex
- Family life Circle
- about a 1/4 og divorces take place in the first 3 yr. of a first marriage, and 1/2 of all divorces take place by the end of the 7th yr. For marriages that last longer, marital satisfaction reaches a low pt. after about 15-20yrs. Marital satisfaction generally starts high, fall when children are born, reaches a low pt when children are in their teenage yrs. and rises agian when children reach adulthood. Nonparents and parents whose children have left the home (empty nesters) enjoy the highest level of marital satisfation
- 3 Factors that account for much of the distress amound children of divorce
- 1)A high level of parental conflict 2)A decline in living standards 3)The absence of a parent
- Wealth
- what you own. For most adults it includes a house (minus the mortgage), a car (minus the loan), and some appliances, furniture, and savings (minus the credit card balance)
- High-Tech Industry Helped to create a New Division at the Bottom of the Lower-Upper class- "Poor Rich"
- The "poor rich" earn more than $100,000 a year and still struggle to get by. Although High-Tech industries helped to change patterns of social stratification in the US, the changes were not always positive
- Foraging Societies
- to survive they hunted wild animals and foraged for wild edible plants. Shared food. They produced little or nothing above what they require for subsistence. There were no rich or poor.
- Horticultural and Pastoral Societies
- use small hand tools to cultivate plants. Domestication of animals. These technological innovations enabled people to produce wealth, a surplus above what they needed for subsistence. A small number of villagers controlled the surplus
- Agrarian Societies
- Developed plow agriculture. Increase the amount they produced. Again thanks to technological innovation, surpluses grew. More wealth came still sharper social stratification
- Industrial societies
- Raised living standards for the entire population. Businesses required a literate, numerate, and highly trained work force. To raise profits they were eager to identify and hire the most talented people. They encouraged everyone to develop their talents and reward them for doing so by paying higher salaries. Stratification declined as industrial societies develpoed
- Postindustrial Societies
- seem to be partly responsible for the trend toward growing inequality in the US. Too premature for a judgment on social inequality. Despite no conclusion on inequality it has been rising for about 25 years.
- Marx
- First Theory- a persons class is determined by the source of his or her income or to uses Marx's term by one's "relationship to the means of producion."
- Status groups
- differ form one another in terms of the prestige or social honor they enjoy and in terms of their lifestyle
- Parties
- In Webs usage are organizations that seek to impose their will on others
- Functional theory of stratification
- argues that (a) some jobs are more important than others, (b) people have to make sacrifices to train for important jobs, and (c) inequality is required to motivate people to undergo these sacrifices.
- Socioeconomic index of occupational status (SEI)
- - Blau and Duncan’s- combines for each occupation, average earning and years of education of men employed full time in the occupation
- Socioeconomic Status (SES)
- combines income, education, and occupation prestige data in a single index of one’s position in the socioeconomic hierarchy
- Intragenerational mobility
- social mobility that occurs within a single generation
- Intergenerational mobility
- social mobility that occurs between generations
- structural mobility
- the social mobility that results from changes in the distribution of occupations
- Class
- in Marx’s sense of the term is determined by ones relationship to the means of production. In Weber’s usage class is determined by ones “market Situationâ€. Wright distinguishes classes on the basis of relationship to the means of production, amount of property owned, organizational assests, and skill. For Goldthorpe classes are determined mainly by ones employment relations
- Poverty rate
- is the percentage of people living below the poverty threshold, which is three times the minimum food budget established by the U.S. Department of Agriculture
- Imperialism
- the economic domination of ones country by another
- Global commodity chain
- a worldwide network of labor and production processes whose end result is a finished commodity
- Transnational corporations
- large businesses that rely increasingly on foreign labor and foreign production; skills and advances in design, technology, and management; world markets; massive advertising campaigns. They are increasingly autonomous form national governments
- Mcdonaldization
- a form of rationalization. Specifically, it refers to the spread of the principles of fast food restaurants, such as efficiency, predictability, and calculability, to all spheres of life.
- Glocalization
- the simultaneous homogenization of some aspects of life and the strengthening of some local differences under the impact of globalization
- Regionalization
- the division of the world into different and often competing economic, political, and cultural areas
- Colonialism
- the control of developing societies by more developed, powerful societies
- Modernization theory
- holds that economic underdevelopment results from poor countries lacking Western attributes. These attributes include Western values, business practices, levels of investment capital, and stable governments
- Dependency Theory
- views economic underdevelopment as the result of exploitative relations between rich and poor countries