A. functionalist perspective
B. conflict perspective
C. interactionist perspective
D. both a and b
Social Stratification
Social Stratification
A. function perspective
B. conflict perspective
C. interactionist perspective
D. labeling theory
A. upward intergenerational mobility
B. upward intergenerational mobility
C. downward intergenerational mobility
D. downward intergenerational mobility
A. colonialism has largely disappeared
B. colonialism was for the most part beneficial for poor uncivilized countries
C. colonialism was inevitable and necessary for human civilization
D. colonialism is perpetuated to this day by practices known as neo-colonialism
A. functionalist perspective
B. conflict perspective
C. interactionist perspective
D. labelling perspective
A. conformity deviance and social control
B. class status and power
C. class caste and age
D. class prestige and esteem
A. Hinduism
B. Islam
C. Judaism
D. Buddhism
A. an urban set involved in civic bodies and voluntary associations
B. too diverse to have a strong sense of class consciousness
C. often involved in white collar work
D. all of the above
A. shared working conditions in the manufacturing industry
B. the class consciousness of members of the proletariat
C. local communities extended kinship networks and shared leisure pursuits
D. collective aspirations to move into the middle class
A. first decreases then increases before remaining high
B. first increases then decreases before remaining low
C. first increases then flattens out, before rising again
D. first increases then decreases then increases then decreases