When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: renegotiating social stratification

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. David Lockwood (sociologist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lockwood_(sociologist)

    Lockwood was born on 9 April 1929 in Holmfirth, England, and was the youngest child in his working-class family. [3] His father, Herbert, was a dyer and then retrained as a cobbler after being wounded during the First World War and he died when Lockwood was 10.

  3. Davis–Moore hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davis–Moore_hypothesis

    The hypothesis is an attempted explanation of social stratification, based on the idea of "functional necessity".Davis and Moore argue that the most difficult jobs in any society are the most necessary and require the highest rewards and compensation to sufficiently motivate individuals to fill them.

  4. Social stratification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_stratification

    The social status variables underlying social stratification are based in social perceptions and attitudes about various characteristics of persons and peoples. While many such variables cut across time and place, the relative weight placed on each variable and specific combinations of these variables will differ from place to place over time.

  5. Wilbert E. Moore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilbert_E._Moore

    Wilbert E. Moore (26 October 1914 – 29 December 1987) was an American sociologist noted, with Kingsley Davis, for their explanation and justification for social stratification, based their idea of "functional necessity."

  6. Status attainment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Status_attainment

    Peter M. Blau (1918–2002) and Otis Duncan (1921–2004) were the first sociologists to isolate the concept of status attainment. Their initial thesis stated that the lower the level from which a person starts, the greater is the probability that he will be upwardly mobile, simply because many more occupational destinations entail upward mobility for men with low origins than for those with ...

  7. Ascriptive inequality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ascriptive_inequality

    Davis believed that ascriptive inequality led to stratification; however, he also believed that stratification was a functioning mechanism to motivate people to do better. He thought that there were certain individuals who were designed for a task, but that others could use competition as motivation to move up the social hierarchy based on ...

  8. Erik Olin Wright - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erik_Olin_Wright

    Erik Olin Wright (February 9, 1947 – January 23, 2019) was an American analytical Marxist sociologist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, specializing in social stratification and in egalitarian alternative futures to capitalism.

  9. Three-component theory of stratification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-component_theory_of...

    The three-component theory of stratification, more widely known as Weberian stratification or the three class system, was developed by German sociologist Max Weber with class, status and party as distinct ideal types. Weber developed a multidimensional approach to social stratification that reflects the interplay among wealth, prestige and power.