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Chapter 12, Political Organization

Chapter 12, Political Organization. Key Terms. Social differentiation The relative access individuals and groups have to basic material resources, wealth, power, and prestige.

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Chapter 12, Political Organization

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  1. Chapter 12, Political Organization Key Terms

  2. Social differentiationThe relative access individuals and groups have to basic material resources, wealth, power, and prestige. Egalitarian societyA society in which no individual or group has more privileged access to resources, power, or prestige than any other.

  3. Rank societySociety characterized by institutionalized differences in prestige but no important restrictions on access to basic resources. Stratified societySociety characterized by permanent social and economic inequality, in which some people are denied access to basic resources.

  4. Achieved statusA social position that a person chooses or achieves on his or her own. • Ascribed statusA social position that a person is born into.

  5. PowerThe ability to control resources in one’s own interest. • AuthorityThe ability to cause others to act based on characteristics such as honor, status, knowledge, ability, respect, the holding of formal public office.

  6. Political ideologyThe shared beliefs and values that legitimize the distribution and use of power in a particular society. Political processThe ways in which individuals and groups use power to achieve public goals.

  7. FactionsInformal systems of alliance within well-defined political units such as lineages or villages. LeadershipThe ability to direct an enterprise or action.

  8. RebellionThe attempt of a group within society to force a redistribution of resources and power. • RevolutionAn attempt to overthrow an existing form of political organization.

  9. LawA means of social control and dispute management through the systematic application of force by those in society with the authority to do so. • Political organizationThe patterned ways in which power is legitimately used in a society to regulate behavior.

  10. Social complexityThe number of different groups and their interrelationships in a society. Band Small group of people, related by blood or marriage, who live together and are loosely associated with a territory in which they forage.

  11. WarA formally organized and culturally recognized patterns of collective violence directed toward other societies or between segments within a larger society. TribeCulturally distinct population whose members consider themselves descended from the same ancestor.

  12. Age setA group of people of similar age and sex who move through some or all of life’s stages together. • Age gradesSpecialized hierarchical associations based on age, which stratify a society by seniority.

  13. Segmentary lineage system A form of sociopolitical organization in which multiple descent groups form at different levels and function in different contexts. • Complementary oppositionA political structure in which higher-order units form alliances that emerge only when lower-order units come into conflict.

  14. BigmanA self-made leader who gains power through personal achievements rather than through political office. MediationA form of managing disputes that uses the offices of a third party to achieve voluntary agreement between disputing parties.

  15. CompensationA payment demanded by an aggrieved party to compensate for damage. • ChiefdomA society with social ranking in which political integration is achieved through an office of centralized leadership called the chief.

  16. AcephalousLacking a government head or chief. StateA hierarchical, centralized form of political organization in which a central government has a legal monopoly over the use of force.

  17. CitizenshipMembership in a state.

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