Introduction to Social Class
Different Social Classes
Social Mobility
Inequality
Poverty
100

Group of individuals who share a similar socio-economic position based on income, wealth, education, and occupation.


Social Class

100

Have probably only completed high school or a trade school; typically work as office support (secretaries and administrative assistants), retail sales workers, factory workers, and low-paid craftspeople.


Working Class

100

Movement from a lower social class position to a higher one.


Upward Mobility

100

An unequal distribution of wealth, income, and opportunities between different social classes. It can lead to social exclusion and unrest. 




Social Class Disparity

100

Poverty measure that takes into account the relative economic status of people in a society by looking at how income is distributed.


Relative Poverty

200

A system that puts categories of people into a hierarchy.

Stratification

200

Well-educated individuals who typically have jobs as business managers, doctors, lawyers, accountants, and some small business owners

Upper-middle Class

200

Movement from an ascribed social class position to a new achieved social class position.


Social Mobility

200

Drastic and growing difference in wealth accumulation between Black and White individuals.


Racial Wealth Gap

200

Poverty measure that considers the basic necessities of life such as food, shelter, and clothing; those without these necessities are considered poor.


Absolute Poverty

300

Amount of money an individual earns from employment or investments.


Income

300

A subgroup of the upper-middle class that relies on their salaries, rather than inherited wealth, for their class position.


Working Rich

300

Movement from a higher social class position to a lower one.


Downward Mobility

300

Advantages that are built up over generations and contribute to social class inequality.


Cumulative Advantages

300

Establishes minimum income level required to obtain the necessities of life.


Poverty Threshold

400

Total amount of money that you have, or would have if you sold off all of your assets.


Wealth

400

Typically employed in insecure and low-wage jobs such as janitorial and cleaning staff, manual labor, landscaping, restaurant support (including fast food, wait staff, line cooks), and other service industries.


Working Poor

400

It can lead to greater opportunities, better jobs, and wider professional networks. It can also benefit the economy and social cohesion.

Higher Social Mobility

400

Belief that personal responsibility and individual effort are the sole determinants of success.

Meritocracy

400

Census tracts where at least 40% of the population is poor.

High-poverty neighborhoods

500

Commonly known as the 1%; class that makes money from things they own such as businesses, real estate, stocks, and bonds.


Capitalists

500

Work part-time, unemployed, or have inconsistent and unreliable work opportunities; often rely on public assistance to meet basic needs for food, shelter, and clothing.


Underclass

500

Affects Social Mobility(2 examples):

Income, Occupation, Education, Social Class, Ethnicity, Race, Gender, Age

500

Statistical measure used to compare inequality across countries.


GINI Index

500

People staying in emergency shelters, transitional housing programs, or safe havens.


Sheltered Homeless

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