Social Stratification
Status
VIP's
Social Control
Theories of Deviance
100

a system in which boundaries between social positions are more flexible

What is an open system?

100

a social position attained by a person largely through their own effort 

What is achieved status?

100

examined class conflict within an economic context

Who is Karl Marx?

100

a process of internalizing the norms of society and accepting them as valid

What is internal social control?

100
Merton's Strain theory is part of this overall theory

What is the Functionalist Perspective on Deviance?

200

a system with strict boundaries between different social positions

What is a closed system?

200

a social position assigned to a person at birth without regard for their characteristics or talents

What is ascribed status?

200

developed the strain theory with five types of deviants

Who is Robert Merton?

200

society's effort to bring those who deviate back into line; it is made of a system of rewards and punishment

What is external social control?

200

this sub-theory states that some people are not viewed as deviant for the same act that someone else might have also done

What is labelling theory?

300

the movement of individuals or groups from one level in a stratification system to another

What is social movement?

300

when people experience a gain or loss in position and/or income that causes movement up or down the class structure

What is vertical mobility?
300
developed the Control Theory, whereby conformity to social norms depends on the presence of strong bonds between individuals and society

Who is Travis Hirschi?

300

rewards or punishments that may be imposed by people who have been given special authority

What is a formal sanction?

300

deviance involving occasional breaking of norms that is not part of a person's lifestyle

What is primary deviance?

400

a type of stratification based on the ownership and control of resources and the type of work people do- Canada has one

What is a class system?

400

social movement of individuals within their own lifetime

What is intragenerational mobility?

400

developed a theory of social justice based on a social contract

Who is John Rawls?

400

rewards or punishments that can be applied by most members of a group

What is an informal sanction?

400

deviance in which an individual's life and identity are organized around breaking society's norms

What is secondary deviance?

500

a system of social inequality in which a person's permanent social status is determined at birth based on their parents' ascribed status - India has one

What is a caste system?

500

social movement experienced by family members from one generation to the next

What is intergenerational mobility?

500

feminist sociologist who believed in the authority of the male standpoint

Who is Dorothy Smith?

500

This is an example of what type of control and sanction; a friendly wave after someone lets you into traffic

What is a positive informal sanction?
500

this theory suggests that the activities of poor and lower-income people are more likely to be defined as criminal than middle or upper class people

What is Conflict Theory?

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