Non-Fiction Books:

Social Stratification and Socioeconomic Inequality

Volume 1: A Comparative Biosocial Analysis
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$288.00
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Description

This is devoted to the study of social stratification from a bio-social perspective. The bio-social perspective explicitly presumes that both biological and social environmental factors are important for explaining behaviour, including behaviour surrounding the formation of hierarchies and unequal distribution of resources. In a variety of ways the contributors to this volume address the issue of how biological factors may interact with social experiences to affect social stratification. Chapters 1 and 2 present a detailed review of the issues concerning how social stratification is defined and subdivided. Chapter 3 takes the reader back to the first six civilisations that evolved on earth and provides a historical picture of social stratification, which served the reproductive interests of a small proportion of males who wielded great political and economic power. In Chapter 4, the nature of social stratification in traditional Arab cultures is explored, and the author hypothesises why different types of stratification systems may have evolved throughout the world. In Chapter 5, the authors provide evidence that genetics are among the factors that contribute to variations in income and wealth. Chapter 6 provides suggestions about how group differences in social stratification may have evolved. The authors contend that sexual selection may be at the heart of the evolution of social stratification, and present a theory as to how it may have happened. Chapter 7 also focuses upon sex as a central variable in social stratification, specifically, how sex hormones alter brain functioning and how these alterations underlie many of the tendencies that men and women have to gravitate toward different types of occupations. In Chapter 8, a general theory of social stratification is presented. It is offered as a specific alternative to the two strictly environmental theories that dominate: functionalist and conflict theories.

Author Biography:

LEE ELLIS is Professor of Sociology at Minot State University in North Dakota. He is the author of Theories of Rape: Inquiries into the Causes of Sexual Aggression (1989), and Research Methods in the Social Sciences: A Practical Introduction (forthcoming, 1993), and the co-editor of Crime in Biological, Social,
Release date NZ
January 30th, 1993
Author
Audiences
  • Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
  • Undergraduate
Pages
256
Dimensions
156x234x15
ISBN-13
9780275932626
Product ID
14001894

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