5.1.1

What is Social Stratification?

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What is Social Stratification?

Social stratification refers to the way society is structured in a hierarchy of unequal strata or layers.

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Social hierarchy

  • Social stratification refers to the way society is structured in a hierarchy of unequal strata or layers.
  • A social hierarchy is shaped like a pyramid with the most privileged group at the tip and the least privileged at the base.
  • There are much fewer highly privileged, wealthy people than there are less privileged and less wealthy.
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Social inequality

  • Social inequality refers to the uneven distribution of resources, such as money and power, and the related opportunities (access to healthcare, education, employment, etc.)
  • Stratification involves the inequality between groups in the distribution of economic and social resources such as wealth, income, status and power.
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Stratification

  • The group in the top rank of the hierarchy is likely to have much more wealth, status or power than the group below it.
  • In the UK, social class, gender, ethnicity and age are the main criteria by which people tend to be stratified.

Different Forms of Stratification

Stratification systems differ according to how open or closed they are.

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Differences

  • Stratification systems differ in terms of:
    • Status (or social position).
    • Ascribed (fixed at birth).
    • Achieved (earned on the basis of merit).
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Open or closed

  • Stratification systems also differ according to how open or closed they are.
  • Open systems allow for social mobility (moving up and down the hierarchy) but this isn’t possible in a closed system.
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Open systems

  • An open system is based on achievement.
  • This is known as meritocracy.
  • For example, your gender or race will not affect your how well you achieve.
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Closed systems

  • A closed system is one where people can do little to change their position in the social hierarchy.
  • An example would be the ‘caste’ system in India where people are born into their social standing and remain in it for their whole lives.

Jump to other topics

1The Sociological Approach

2Families

3Education

4Crime & Deviance

5Social Stratification

6Sociological Research Methods

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