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March 16 th

March 16 th. Attendance and participation Let me know if you want to do and re-write for exam #1 Lecture 8: Gender Stratification Homework: CCA annotated bibliography and outline. Lecture 8. Gender Stratification. Difference & Stratification.

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March 16 th

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  1. March 16th • Attendance and participation • Let me know if you want to do and re-write for exam #1 • Lecture 8: Gender Stratification • Homework: • CCA annotated bibliography and outline

  2. Lecture 8 Gender Stratification

  3. Difference & Stratification • In a mixed-class system we can see how both ascribed (race, gender) and achieved (talent, hard work) determine one’s position in the opportunity structure • Therefore, social categories of difference become institutionalized in our social structure and create a society in which race and gender inequality are part of our daily lives

  4. What affects our access to economic resources? • In a mixed-class system, our access to economic resources is largely determined by our masterstatus position, which is a social category that takes priority over all other positions and usually determine ones position in the system of stratification • Master status positions in American society are socially constructed categories such as race/ethnicity and gender

  5. Sexual Division of Labor • Almost all societies have a sexual division of labor • Gender is one of the primary ways that the work that is needed to take care of the needs of individuals, families, and society as a whole is accomplished • As the structure of society changes, gender ideology, gender roles and gender equality also change

  6. Industrialization and the Family • With industrialization, we became dependent on wages ($) earned in paid work to help support family life • This created a distinct separation of work • Inside (private) & outside (public) the home • Paid work and the unpaid work of family life

  7. The Family-Wage • A family-wage economy is an economic system in which families have one member earning wages to support the family. This wage therefore has to be a family-wage with: • High pay to support dependents • Benefits that are extended to all family members • But, also requires high skilled labor (investment in education) & time investment in return

  8. Gender Ideology, Family, and Work • The family-wage economic brought about changes in the social structure that were supported by, and supported, a specific gender ideology • Separate Spheres Ideology naturalizes the idea that men and women are responsible and ‘naturally’ inclined to separate spheres of social life Men as Providers Work & Public Life Women as Caretakers Family Life

  9. His and Her Family • Dichotomization of morality for men and women in family life • Men are encouraged to focus on self-interest for the family • Women are encouraged to focus on self-sacrifice for the good of the family

  10. Social & Economic Invisibility of Household Labor • Mom’s “market value” is about 30K greater than the average man’s wage…but • Labeled “unoccupied” in our national accounting system • No retirement, unemployment, health benefits, nor individual social security • “Second Shift”: in dual-income households women often do most of the unpaid labor • Working women have 9 hours more housework per week than men in the same household

  11. Your household DOL?

  12. Occupational Segregation • “Female” and “Male” professions: In 2003 women were • 96% of secretaries • 91% of nurses • 95% of child care workers • 99% of dental hygienists • and 97% of kindergarten and preschool teachers • But also, 30% physicians, 14% architects, 27% lawyers • Why do we see women entering men’s professions, but not the other way around?

  13. Gender Wage Gap

  14. Is education the great equalizer? • High School Diploma: • men = $32K women = $22K • BA/BS Degree: • men = $51K women = $36K • PhD: • men = $77K women $56K

  15. President of HarvardFewer Tenured Women in the Sciences… “And the relatively few women who are in the highest ranking places are disproportionately either unmarried or without children…[T]here are many professions and many activities, and the most prestigious activities in our society expect of people who are going to rise to leadership positions in their forties near total commitments to their work. They expect a large number of hours in the office, they expect a flexibility of schedules to respond to contingency, they expect a continuity of effort through the life cycle, and they expect-and this is harder to measure-but they expect that the mind is always working on the problems that are in the job, even when the job is not taking place. And it is a fact about our society that that is a level of commitment that a much higher fraction of married men have been historically prepared to make than of married women.”

  16. Male Pattern of Work • The most rewarded careers in our society (prestige and $) are generally based on the assumption that: • Time commitment while young • long hours • flexibility in your schedule • and limited household responsibility • Imagine what is takes to become a: • Medical doctor • Lawyer

  17. Race, Gender, Sexual Inequality: It’s Not Personal • Institutional “ism’s”: systematic inequalities pervade all of societies structures • Institutions such as the police, education, employment, mass media etc. • Racism and sexism are part of the fabric of social life • Not about the prejudice of a small minority, but about the policies and ideologies that create a legacy of inequality

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