5th Edition

Structure of Social Stratification in the United States

By Leonard Beeghley Copyright 2007
    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    336 Pages
    by Routledge

    This text examines the structure of stratification in the United States, focusing on the way one's class location influences his or her life opportunities. Beeghley uses three themes to illustrate social stratification: How power influences the distribution of resources in the United States; how social structure influences rates of events; and how social psychological factors influence how individuals act on, and react to, the situations in which they find themselves.

    Preface.  1. Sociology and Stratification.  Theoretical Perspectives on Stratification: Karl Marx, Max Weber, Kingsley Davis and Wilbert Moore, Ralf Dahrendorf, Gerhard Lenski.  Modernity, the American Dream, and Anomie.  A Strategy for the Study of Stratification: Historical and Cross-National Dimensions of Stratification, Levels of Analysis and Stratification, Power and Stratification.  2. Race/Ethnicity and Stratification.  Dimensions of Racial and Ethnic Stratification: Racial and Ethnic Stratification in the United States, Racial and Ethnic Stratification in Cross-National Perspective.  Anomie, the American Dream, and the Impact of Racial and Ethnic Stratification.  The Individual and Racial and Ethnic Stratification: Public Place Discrimination, Organizational Discrimination.  Social Structure and Racial and Ethnic Stratification: Historical Variations in Racial and Ethnic Group Mobility, Racial and Ethnic Inequality Today.  3. Gender and Stratification.  Dimensions of Gender Stratification: Gender Stratification in the United States, Gender Stratification in Cross-National Perspective.  Some Consequences of Gender Stratification: Authority and Gender, Victimization and Gender.  The Individual and Gender Stratification: Women's Choices, Discrimination.  Social Structure and Gender Stratification: The Decline of Gender Stratification, The Continuation of Gender Stratification.  4.Social Class and Stratification: Occupational Prestige and Class Identification.  Occupational Prestige: Occupational Prestige in the United States, The Meaning of Occupational Prestige, Racial/Ethnic and Gender Differences in Occupational Prestige, The Stability of Occupational Prestige over Time, The Stability of Occupational Prestige across Societies?  Class Identification: Patterns of Class Identification, The Meaning of Class Identification, A Note on Employed Married Women.  5. Social Class and Stratification: Mobility and Status Attainment.  Social Mobility: Social Mobility in the United States,  Social Mobility in Cross-National Perspective.  Social Structure and Mobility: Structural Mobility, Circulation Mobility, An Example of Upward Mobility.  Status Attainment: Status Attainment in the United States, Status Attainment in Cross-National Perspective.  The Individual and Status Attainment: Two Vignettes, Social Class and Status Attainment.  Anomie, The Ameriacn Dream, and Stratification.  6. Political Participation and Power.  Types of Participation: Voting, Partisanship, Unruliness.  The Rate of Voting: Voting in the United States, Voting in Cross-National Perspective.  Social Structure and Voting: Type of Electoral System, Who Gets to Vote, Gerrymandering, Election Day, Registration Requirements, Degree of Inequality, A Note on Voting Technology and Counting the Votes.  Partisanship and the Role of Money in Elections: The Cost of Winning; Money, Winning, and Reelection; Where Does the Money Come From?; An Example.  Social Class and Political Partisanship.  Conclusion: Political Participation and Anomie.  7. The Rich.  The Characteristics of the Rich: Counting the Rich, The Basis of Great Wealth, The Concentration of Wealth.  The Historical Trend in the Distribution of Wealth: The Kuznets Hypothesis, The Colonial Era, The Nineteenth Century, The Twentieth Century, The Trend Since 1980.  The Origin and Expansion of Wealth.  Power and Wealth Inequality.  Social Class and Lifestyle.  8. The Middle Class.  Social Class and Job Perquisites: Paid Time-Off Benefits, Medical Benefits, Family Benefits, Pension Benefits, Top Level Perquisites.  Social Class, Income Inequality, and Income Transfers: Social Class and Income, Trends in Income Inequality, Tax Expenditures and Income Inequality, Income Inequality and Economic

    Biography

    Leonard Beeghley