Vocabulary
Poverty
Social Mobility
Social Mobility 2
People and theories
100

Social stratification 

Social stratification is the creation of layers (or strata) of people who possess unequal shares of scarce resources

100

What is the difference between absolute and relative poverty?

absolute poverty inoloves the absense of resources, relative is being in "poverty" relative to where you live. 

100

Horizontal mobility

changing from one occupation to another at the same social class level.  No real change in occupational status or social class

100

Open-class system

an individual’s social class is based on merit and individual effort and people can move up and down the stratification structure as their abilities, education and resources permit.

100

 identified two main classes in capitalist societies

Karl Marx

200

Social Class

is a segment of the population who members hold similar amounts of scarce resources and share values, norms and an identifiable lifestyle

200

Name an aspect of welfare reform


    • Limits the amount of times those able to work can receive welfare payments.


      • Reduces welfare spending, increases state and local power to oversee welfare rules, and it adds new restrictions on welfare eligibility.

200

Vertical mobility

person’s occupational status or social class moves upward or downward.

200

Intergenerational mobility 

when changes take place over a generation

200

 argued that while having money certainly helps, economic success and power are not the same

Max Weber

300

Power

Power is the ability to control the behavior of others, even against their will

300

was enacted during the Great Depression of the 1920s but did not usually reach the lowest levels of needy citizens

Social Security and Aid to Families with Dependent Children

300

What is the difference between horizontal and verticle mobility

answers will vary

300

Name an example of intergenerational mobility 

answers will vary 

300

Name the theory : Recognizes the inequality that exists because certain jobs are more important than others and these jobs require special talent and training.

Functionalist theory 

400

Class Consciousness

awareness of one's place in a system of social classes, especially (in Marxist terms) as it relates to the class struggle.


400

What was a goal of the war on poverty? 

To help poor people help themselves

400

What is a caste system

no social mobility because the social status is inherited and cannot be changed

400

Social mobility 

the movement of people between the social classes.    

400

Name the theory: nequality exists because some people are willing to exploit others.  Stratification is based on force rather than on voluntarily agreeing to it.

Conflict theory 

500

Globalization

he process by which businesses or other organizations develop international influence or start operating on an international scale.

500

Name a criticism of the war on poverty

wide-spread abuses and the fear that the system encourages people to become dependent upon the government

500

_______ country is famous for its traditional caste system

India

500

Why did the increase in upward mobility after WW2 stop ? 

 companies are shipping jobs overseas to pay lower salaries thus people who lack education needed to perform more sophisticated jobs are forced to take lower-paying jobs

500

    • Helps us understand how people are socialized to accept the existing stratification structure.


    • For example, American children are taught that a person’s social class is the result of talent and effort

Symbolic interactionism 

M
e
n
u