Global Stratification
(noun)
The hierarchical arrangement of individuals and groups in societies around the world.
Examples of Global Stratification in the following topics:
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Stratification
- Global stratification refers to the hierarchical arrangement of individuals and groups in societies around the world.
- Global stratification refers to the hierarchical arrangement of individuals and groups in societies around the world.
- Second, dependency theory blames colonialism and neocolonialism (continuing economic dependence on former colonial countries) for global stratification.
- Globally, the poorest 20% of the population, or lowest tier of the stratified economic order, makes a disproportionately small percentage of global income and lives off of a meager amount.
- Analyze the three dominant theories that attempt to explain global stratification
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Global Stratification and Inequality
- Global stratification refers to the hierarchical arrangement of individuals and groups in societies around the world.
- Classic sociologist Max Weber analyzed three dimensions of stratification: class, status, and party.
- Modern sociologists, however, generally speak of stratification in terms of socioeconomic status (SES).
- Stratification is generally analyzed from three different perspectives: micro, meso, and macro.
- Macro-level analyses of stratification can include global analyses of how positions in the international economic system shape access to resources and opportunities.
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Industrializing Countries
- While Brazil has not fully developed its industrial base and its economy has much room for expansion, it is a more powerful player in the global market than less developed nations, such as Haiti.
- While Brazil has not fully developed its industrial base and its economy has much room for expansion, it is a more powerful player in the global market than nations that are less developed, such as Haiti.
- Considering global stratification, industrializing nations are at the middle of the hierarchy.
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Power and Inequality
- Social inequalities exist between ethnic or religious groups, classes and countries, making the concept a global phenomenon.
- Theories of social stratification are based on four basic principles:
- Social stratification is a trait of society, not simply a reflection of individual differences.
- In modern Western societies, stratification is broadly organized into three main layers: upper class, middle class, and lower class.
- Social stratification has been shown to cause many social problems.
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Points of View: Micro-Meso-Macro
- Stratification occurs in small groups and face-to-face interaction.
- At the beginning of the chapter, we looked at how stratification begins when we are young.
- The police, courts, and prisons reinforce the stratification system.
- All of these institutions support the stratification system by favoring the rich and powerful.
- Besides being in debt to countries of the North, (the U.S. and Europe) Cape Verde is part of the global economy in other ways.
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Introduction
- Stratification refers to the hierarchical arrangement of people in a society.
- This chapter focuses on economic stratification; meaning how people are differentiated based upon their wealth (and/or power).
- Statistics on United States and global inequality are widespread and alarming.
- The chapter then turns to dominant theories on stratification, and explores class, race, and gender inequality in more detail.
- We end with consequences of inequality and theories explaining global inequality.
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Abiotic Factors Influencing Aquatic Biomes
- Abiotic factors that influence aquatic biomes include light availability, depth, stratification, temperature, currents, and tides.
- In freshwater systems, stratification due to differences in density is perhaps the most critical abiotic factor and is related to the energy aspects of light.
- The thermal properties of water (rates of heating and cooling) are significant to the function of marine systems and have major impacts on global climate and weather patterns.
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The Significance of Social Inequality
- Social stratification and inequality are everywhere and impact us throughout our lives.
- Sociology has a long history of studying stratification and teaching about various kinds of inequality, including economic inequality, racial/ethnic inequality, gender inequality, and other types of inequality.
- Statistics on United States and global inequality are alarming.
- The water situation in Cape Verde, an island country in the central Atlantic, is a poignant illustration of global social inequality.
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Great Zimbabwe
- Great Zimbabwe shows a high degree of social stratification, characteristic for centralized states.
- Some of the artifacts on the site, such as ceramics and glass vessels, appear to have come from Arabia, India, and even China, suggesting that Great Zimbabwe was a major trade center, part of an extensive global exchange network.
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Explaining Poverty: The Sociological Debate
- Sociologists take two opposing approaches to explaining economic stratification: structural-functionalism and conflict theory.
- Two classic sociological approaches to poverty and social stratification are structural-functionalism and conflict theory.
- The structural-functionalist approach to stratification asks the question: what function or purpose does stratification serve?
- Second, this approach assumes that the system of stratification is fair and rational, and that the ‘best' people end up on top because of their superiority.
- In contrast to structural-functionalists, conflict theorists argue that stratification is dysfunctional and harmful in society.