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         Social Stratification:     more books (100)
  1. Social Divisions, Second Edition
  2. Social Stratification and Socioeconomic Inequality: Volume 2: Reproductive and Interpersonal Aspects of Dominance and Status
  3. Social Stratification: The Interplay of Class, Race, and Gender (2nd Edition) by Daniel W. Rossides, 1996-07-27
  4. Social Stratification (Oxford in India Readings in Sociology and Social Anthropology)
  5. Social Stratification: A Reader by Joseph Lopreato, Lionel Stanley Lewis, 1974-09-19
  6. Social Stratification - by Melvin M. Tumin -, 1985
  7. Social Stratification and Change in India by Yogendra Singh, 1997-01-01
  8. Social Stratification in Africa by Arthur Tuden, Leonard Plotnicov, 1970-06-01
  9. Social stratification in Peru (Politics of modernization series No. 5) by Magali Sarfatti Larson, 1969
  10. The Future of Market Transition, Volume 19 (Research in Social Stratification and Mobility)
  11. Structured Social Inequality: A Reader in Comparative Social Stratification
  12. Stratification and social class (The Sociological perspective) by Graeme Salaman, 1972
  13. Social Stratification (Sociological Studies) by Jackson, 1968-11-02
  14. Social Stratification, Canada by William G Scott, 1979-03

41. Social Stratification Fall 2001
Sociology 4035 Fall, 2001 social stratification. ONLINE RESOURCES social stratificationHOME PAGE http//csf.colorado.edu/gimenez/courses/strat.html.
http://csf.colorado.edu/gimenez/courses/403501.html
Sociology 4035 Fall, 2001 SOCIAL STRATIFICATION Professor: Martha E. Gimenez
Office: Ketchum 205A
EMAIL: gimenez@csf.colorado.edu
Telephone: 492-7080
OFFICE HOURS: T-Th 2:00 to 3:00
and by appointment.
VIRTUAL OFFICE HOURS: All students are encouraged to ask
questions using email. Questions and answers will be posted so that everyone benefits. All students are REQUIRED to join the class electronic network.
Additional or substitute reading assignments, important deadlines, reminders, information and general discussion will be posted daily. READ YOUR EMAIL EVERYDAY TO KEEP INFORMED.
ONLINE RESOURCES: SOCIAL STRATIFICATION HOME PAGE
http://csf.colorado.edu/gimenez/courses/strat.html FALL SEMESTER SYLLABUS ON LINE: http://csf.colorado.edu/gimenez/courses/403501.html Explore the course home page and adjacent pages, including the page currently in construction for this semester: http://csf.colorado.edu/gimenez/courses/strat01.html You will find previous syllabi, exams, study questions, and useful links to data and sources of information that supplement, in important ways, the required readings. Throughout the semester, I will be adding new links, including those you find and send me through email. Students who make good contributions to the course page, updating or submitting new links accompanied by comments (at most two screens in length) indicating their relevance to the course, will be awarded extra credit. COURSE DESCRIPTION : The study of theories of social, race/ethnic, sex, and age stratification. Social inequality in the United States will be examined in a comparative context, giving emphasis to the analysis of resulting conflicts.

42. Social Stratification In Contemporary Japan; ; Kenji Kosaka
BUY ONLINE $144.50 October, 1994 cloth 265 pages ISBN 07103-0467-6 Kegan Paul.New Book Bulletins. social stratification in Contemporary Japan. Kenji Kosaka.
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/071030/0710304676.HTM
Order Info F.A.Q. Help Advanced ... BUY ONLINE
October, 1994
cloth
265 pages
ISBN:
Kegan Paul
New Book Bulletins
Social Stratification in Contemporary Japan
Kenji Kosaka Contemporary Japanese society is often regarded as an enigma in the West because of its miraculous economic growth and the unparalleled stability of its socio-political structure. Yet until now, there have been very few works available in English which are concerned with stratification and class perceptions in contemporary Japan. This study is both empirical and theoretical, with the sociological perspective serving as the underlying framework. A succinct historical overview is provided for those unfamiliar with modern Japanese history. About the Author
Kenji Kosaka holds a B.A. and M.A. in Sociology from Kwansei Gakuin University and a Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Pittsburgh. Hi is Professor of Sociology at Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan. From the series Japanese Studies Series For more information, please contact Customer Service
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43. The Dynamics Of Social Stratification In Contemporary Asian Societies: A Curricu
The Dynamics of social stratification in Contemporary Asian Societies A CurriculumModule. Designed By Ambrose Inyang. DEFINING social stratification, 6.
http://library.kcc.hawaii.edu/asdp/soc/asian/INYANG.html
About
Index Search Other Links ... Comments/Submissions
The Dynamics of Social Stratification in Contemporary Asian Societies: A Curriculum Module
Designed By
Ambrose Inyang
As Part of a Title VI Program on Undergraduate Global Studies Sponsored by The Department of Education and Supported by St. Louis Community College at Meramec
SLCC at Meramec Spring Semester St. Louis, Missouri April, 1996
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION EDUCATIONAL GOALS with corresponding LEARNING OBJECTIVES PRE-TESTING INSTRUMENT CLASS ACTIVITIES AND EXERCISES DEFINING SOCIAL STRATIFICATION PROGRESSION OF SOCIAL INEQUALITY LEGITIMATION AND STRATIFICATION SYSTEMS OBJECTIVE DIMENSIONS OF STRATIFICATION SOCIAL MOBILITY GENDER STRATIFICATION CONSEQUENCES OF STRATIFICATION MITIGATING FACTORS OF STRATIFICATION DISCUSSION QUESTIONS CONCLUDING STATEMENTS The Dynamics of Social Stratification in Contemporary Asian Societies: A Curriculum Module
INTRODUCTION
EDUCATIONAL GOALS
with corresponding LEARNING OBJECTIVES
To expose students to the potential benefits of cross-cultural studies and stimulate their interest in adopting a cross-cultural approach in their subsequent scholarly undertakings.
Each student should be able to list five important things she/he has learned about stratification in each of the major geographic regions of the world. Each student should provide two reasons why she/he may adopt a cross-cultural approach in future studies.

44. SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
social stratification. 10/15/99. Click here to start. Table of Contents. SOCIALSTRATIFICATION. Systems of Stratification. FORMS OF STRATIFICATION.
http://campus.northpark.edu/sociology/soca_1910/Stratification/
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
Click here to start
Table of Contents
SOCIAL STRATIFICATION Systems of Stratification FORMS OF STRATIFICATION THE CASTE SYSTEM ... GLOBALLY SPEAKING.... Author: Frank Steinhart

45. Syllabus - Social Stratification
social stratification. Comparative Sociology 204. Prof. 1994. “Toward a Sociologicaltheory of income differences” from Grusky, social stratification. 11.
http://www.ups.edu/faculty/raconnolly/Courses/Stratification/StratificationSylla
Social Stratification Comparative Sociology 204 Prof. Richard Anderson-Connolly Spring 2003 McIntyre 203 M, W, F 12:00-12:50 Professor Richard Anderson-Connolly Office: McIntyre 213N Phone: X3597 Office Hours: MWF 11-12 e-mail: raconnolly@ups.edu webpage: www.ups.edu/faculty/raconnolly/ Course Description: This semester we will examine a number of issues related to the distribution of resources, primarily income, in society. To do this we must confront the ethical issues surrounding inequality, obtain an accurate description of inequality, and finally, make a theoretical and empirical attempt to explain stratification. Stratification, within any particular economic (national) system, must be thought of in two important ways. First, we can conceive of the distribution of income without considering how the particular individuals got to where they are. We could look at the percentage of the population that makes less than $10,000 a year, for example, without examining the characteristics of the people in this category. This will be referred to as a “structural” analysis of stratification.

46. ISA Research Committee 28 On Social Stratification And Social Mobility
ISA Research Committee 28 on social stratification and Social Mobility.Summaries of paper presented at RC28 conferences 19911998
http://www.fss.uu.nl/soc/HG/rc28/
ISA Research Committee 28 on Social Stratification and Social Mobility
Summaries of paper presented at RC28 conferences 1991-1998 Archival information on RC28 1991-1998

47. The Culture Of The Internet And Usenet: 4.7 Social Stratification
4.7 social stratification. 4.7.1 Types of societies. As argued in section 4.7 (Socialstratification) the Net society has a tendency towards egalitarianism.
http://www.scribe.com.au/timn/thesis/chap4c.html
4.7 Social stratification
4.7.1 Types of societies
One important way in which anthropologists classify different societies is according to the degree to which different groups within a society have unequal access to advantages such as resources, prestige or power (Ember and Ember, 1990; Murphy, 1989; Nanda, 1991). For example, Howard (1989) writes: Virtually all societies have developed some degree of inequality among their people through the process of social stratification-the division of members of a society into strata (or levels) with unequal wealth, prestige or power. (p. 279) The stratification of different groups within a society gives rise to three different types of societies being generally recognised: egalitarian societies, ranked societies and class-based societies. The major differentiating characteristics of these societies are summarised in the table below:
Table 4.1. Stratification in three types of societies.
(From Ember and Ember 1990, p. 139.) Those societies with the least stratification are known as egalitarian. Howard describes egalitarian societies like so: People tend to treat each other as equals ... Wealth differences are few as is the amount of power available to any individual or group. The people possess norms that emphasise sharing and ideals of interpersonal equality. This is not to say that stratification is non-existent in these societies ... In comparison with nonegalitarian societies, however, stratification is relatively insignificant. (p. 281)

48. Sociology - 423-01 - Social Stratification - Spring 2003
Sociology 42301 - social stratification, Spring 2003. Title. Loan Period,Copies. Modern theories of social stratification (file), 2HR/DLL, 2.
http://db.lib.uidaho.edu/ereserve/show_course.php3?pointer=1227

49. Department Of Communities And Social Stratification
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Institute of Sociology Department of Communitiesand social stratification. DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITIES AND social stratification
http://www.cl.bas.bg/sociology/Departments/DCSS.htm

50. Social Stratification
social stratificationHilary 2003. Tutorial topics and readings Comparestatus and class as distinct dimensions of social stratification.
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~sfos0006/strat/strat.html
Social Stratification-Hilary 2003
Tutorial topics and readings:
  • What do sociologists mean by social class? How has the class structure of industrial societies evolved? And how does the pattern of intergenerational class mobility vary between countries and over time?
    • Marshall, G. et al. Against the Odds? , Clarendon Press, (chap.34).
    • Erikson, R. and J.H. Goldthorpe (1992) The Constant Flux , Clarendon Press, (chap.16, 11).
    • Erikson, R. and J.H. Goldthorpe (2002) `Intergenerational Inequality: A Sociological Perspective', JEP Goldthorpe, J.H. (2000) On Sociology , Oxford University Press, (chap.10). Ganzeboom, H.B.G. et al. (1991) `Intergenerational Class Mobility in Comparative Perspective', Research in Social Stratification and Mobiltiy
    • Ganzeboom, H.B.G. et al. (1991) `Comparative Intergenerational Stratification Research', Annual Review of Sociology
    • Grusky, D.B. and R.M. Hauser (1984) `Comparative Social Mobility Revisited', ASR
    • Sorensen, A.B. (1986) `Theory and Methodology in Social Stratification', pp.6995, in Sociology: From Crisis to Science , edited by U. Himmelstrand, Sage .
  • 51. Social Stratification Experts
    SkipHome Help Search Index LSEforYou. Skip You are here Welcometo LSE Experts social stratification. social stratification . Expert.
    http://www.lse.ac.uk/resources/experts/expertise/social_stratification.htm

    52. ISA Research Committee 28 On Social Stratification And Social Mobility
    Junsuke Hara and Kazuo Seiyama, 1999. social stratification Inequality in an affluentSociety. University of Tokyo Press (Japanese). Randy Hodson (Editor).
    http://www.soc.duke.edu/~rc28/publication/publication.html
    Recent Books published by RC28 Members
    Andreas Moschonas Class and Stratification in Modern Societies, vol.1: Theoretical Approaches(in Greek: Taxes kai Stromata stis Synchrones Koinonies, tomosl: Theoritikes Prosengiseis (Athina: Publications Odysseas, 1998), pp172 contents: 1. Introduction; Part One, Weberian Interpretations: 2. The Weberian Tradition; 3. Stratification and Systemic Integration; 4. Stratification and Social Gonflict; 5. Social Mobility; Part Two, Marxist Interpretations: 6. Marxian Tradition; 7.Economic Interpretation of Classes; 8. Structural Interpretation of Classes; 9. Historical Interpretation of Classes; Part Three, Epilogue: 10.Structure and Action in Weberian and Marxist Interpretations Contact: Andreas Moschonas, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Crete, 74100 Rethymno, Crete, Greece. Tel: 0030-831-77484. Fax: 0030-831-77467 Samuel R. Lucas, University of California Tracking Inequality: Stratification and Mobility in American High Schools. Foreword by Jeannie Oakes.
    "Lucas provides one of the most compelling descriptions of tracking of any researcher writing today....this book will change the way that sociologists, and ultimately educators and parents, view the new forms of tracking." James E. Rosenbaum, Northwestern University

    53. ISA Research Committee 28 On Social Stratification And Social
    GENERAL OBJECTIVE 1. Research Committee 28 on social stratification and Social Mobility(hereafter RC28) has been established in accordance with article 4 of
    http://www.soc.duke.edu/~rc28/statutes/statutes.html
    GENERAL OBJECTIVE 1. Research Committee 28 on Social Stratification and Social Mobility (hereafter RC28) has been established in accordance with article 4 of the statutes of the International Sociological Association (hereafter ISA). Its general objectives are to promote high quality research on social stratification and social mobility, and the international exchange of scientific information in this field. ACTIVITIES
      2. To bring these objectives to realization, RC28 will carry out the following activities:
      • Organize sessions at the ISA's World Congresses of Sociology. Publish a Newsletter, mailed to all members in good standing, to keep them informed of ongoing and planned activities. Organize and sponsor additional international meetings, where stratification researchers come together to exchange information and collaborate. Any other activities that promote the objectives of the RC28.
      MEMBERSHIP 3. Any social scientist can be a member of the RC28, provided:
      • S/he has paid the applicable RC28 membership fee. S/he has been accepted as a member by the RC Board, from which acceptance will not be unreasonably withheld.

    54. CFP: Market Expansion, Welfare State Retrenchment & Social Stratification
    Call for Papers ISA Research Committee on social stratification (RC28)Spring Meeting Mannheim, Germany April 2628, 2001. The theme
    http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/cjscopy/events/strat2000.html
    Call for Papers
    ISA Research Committee on Social Stratification (RC28)
    Spring Meeting
    Mannheim, Germany
    April 26-28, 2001
    The theme for the conference is "Market Expansion, Welfare State Retrenchment and their Impact on Social Stratification". Papers on this topic will be given preference. Papers not related to this topic should be at least congenial to RC28 interest in cross-time and cross-national comparisons in stratification research. Other planned features of the programme include an Authors Meet the Critics session. The conference is organised by Walter Mueller and colleagues from the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research, University of Mannheim, Germany.
    Participants must submit paper proposals (title and abstract) and registration form by December 31, 2000
    For all communication please e-mail RC28@mzes.uni-mannheim.de Program details and registration forms can be found at
    http://www.mzes.uni-mannheim.de/rc28/rc28-more.html

    On-line registration is preferred, if not possible contact Stefani Scherer

    55. Research In Social Stratification And Mobility V 16
    Kevin T. Liecht, ed. Research in social stratification and Mobility,volume 16. Stamford JAI Press, 1998, 376 pp. npl Cloth. This
    http://www.arts.ualberta.ca/cjscopy/reviews/resinstrat.html
    Kevin T. Liecht, ed. Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, volume 16. Stamford: JAI Press, 1998, 376 pp. npl Cloth.
    This latest edition of the JAI series in stratification and mobility continues the tradition of collecting together high quality work in one of the central areas of sociology. The thirteen articles are grouped into three main categories: the changing international context of social stratification; race, immigration and life chances, and; the distinctiveness of independent business as a locus of social stratification. Most of the articles are rigourously quantitative, as is characteristic of both this field of research and this series.
    The first section on international stratification contains five articles which focus on stratification patterns in Europe, China, Taiwan, Israel, Nigeria and Australia. Morgan and Morgan begin the section by trying to explain an overall decline in the rates of return to education in Nigeria, and why people continued to stay in the high education, public sector despite a 60% decrease in real earnings between 1974 and 1992. They argue that it is not simply that the educated class has a distaste for physical and non-intellectual work, but rather that strong kinship and patron/client relationships in Nigeria reinforce the embeddedness of people in wider social networks. Educated people stay in low paying jobs because they bring prestige to the family unit, while others who work in the higher paying, less prestigious private sector can be counted on to provide income.

    56. Sociology @ Salford - Social Stratification
    social stratification. General aspects of social class and social stratificationwill be examined through material related to contemporary Britain.
    http://www.espch.salford.ac.uk/sociol/socstrat.html
    The School Homepages English Sociology University web pages About the University Faculties and schools Online Reception Search the University web site
    SOCIAL STRATIFICATION
    This module aims to provide a basic introduction to sociological arguments and evidence about the nature of social stratification in advanced industrial society. It will provide an overview of selected conceptual, theoretical and empirical issues raised in the analysis of various forms of social inequality. General aspects of social class and social stratification will be examined through material related to contemporary Britain. The module is designed to enable students to:
    • understand the nature of various types of stratification
      understand the specific features of social class divisions in capitalist society
      be aware of the conceptual and methodological problems of identifying and operationalising classes and social strata
      understand empirical evidence about social inequality and stratification, and be able to critically appraise sociological explanations of that evidence

    57. SOCIAL SCIENCES DEPARTMENT
    social stratification. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN. This course aims at introducingstudents to key theorists and some basic facts of social stratification.
    http://www.ucd.ie/~sociolog/soc2004.htm
    SOCIAL STRATIFICATION UNIVERSITY COLLEGE DUBLIN SOCIOLOGY DEPARTMENT Instructor: Dr. Andreas Hess Time: Thursdays 16.00-17.00 (daytime undergraduates) Wednesdays 19.30-20.30 (modulars) Location: Main Arts, Lecture Theatre M (daytime undergraduates) Main Arts, D106 (modulars) This course aims at introducing students to key theorists and some basic facts of social stratification. We will first look at concepts that originated in the classic tradition of Marx Weber and Durkheim. In a second step we will investigate how these concepts and their consecutive interpretation and advancement have been applied to the empirical environment in America (US) and Europe (UK and the Republic of Ireland). The course will end with a discussion of the relationship between an assumed political equality (citizenship) and actually existing social inequality. Students who successfully complete this course should be able
    • to understand that useful knowledge in the field of social stratification stems neither from ‘deducing down’ from ‘grand theory’ nor from ‘building up’ from pure empirical research but that it is rather concepts which mediate between the tensions of the two levels of theoretical abstraction and empirical environment; to understand the history of concepts that help to explain social stratification;

    58. The Social Stratification Of Chinese In Nanjing City.
    The social stratification of Chinese in Nanjing City. Project country, China. Titleof the project, The social stratification of Chinese in Nanjing City.
    http://www.ace.lu.se/projects/esa148.html
    The social stratification of Chinese in Nanjing City.
    Project country China Title of the project The social stratification of Chinese in Nanjing City. Description of
    the project The project aims at analysing the social variations of the Nanjing dialect and its relation to the Chinese standard language. Key person in Lund Magnus Nordenhake E-mail Magnus.Nordenhake@ostas.lu.se Department Dept of East Asian Languages, Lund University Address Box 7033, S-220 07 Lund, Sweden Visiting address Tunavägen 39 E Tel work Fax Network Dept of Chinese language and literature, Nanjing Univ., China. Co-worker Nanjing University, China Search-words Chinese language, Nanjing dialect Created 1996-04-23 Lund University
    Programme for East and Southeast Asian Studies
    Lund Sweden

    59. Social Stratification (PSC Graduate Course)
    social stratification. Sociology 622. This course surveys various theoreticaland methodological approaches to the study of social stratification.
    http://www.psc.isr.umich.edu/training/courses-detail.shtml?ID=17

    60. Black Occupations And Social Stratification In Nineteenth Century Boston
    Calendar. About the Site. Contact Us. Black Occupations and SocialStratification in Nineteenth Century Boston. Composed of New England
    http://www.nps.gov/boaf/occupations.htm
    Page 1
    Page 2

    Page 3

    Page 4
    Biographies ... Contact Us
    Black Occupations and Social Stratification in Nineteenth Century Boston
    Composed of New England Africans, free Blacks from the south, and even immigrants from the West Indies and Nova Scotia, people of African descent played an integral part in the nineteenth century Boston workforce. From these workers - unskilled, low-skilled, and professional - there arose a strong Black community committed to the struggle for freedom, dignity, and liberty of Black people throughout the country. Yet even with the majority of Black people working at the lowest job levels, important distinctions were made that led to the development of social stratification within this under-skilled and underpaid workforce. For instance, while in the White community the job of porter and laborer were both categorized as lower-class work, in the Black community this was not the case. While approximately 60% of the Black unskilled or semi-skilled workforce were laborers on the docks of Boston Harbor - seamen, stevedores, dock-workers, etc. this work was often sporadic because of the seasonal nature of the maritime industry. continued...

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