4. Inequality Flashcards

1
Q

Inequality axis

A

Woman
Age (autonomy)
Class
Migrants and minorities
Functional diversity (social stigma and need for adaptations)

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2
Q

Inequality related to power structures

Traditional vs industrial societies

Ways of stratification of power

A

age and gender
wealth, properties, access to goods and culture

  • slavery
  • casts (in Hinduism divided into 4)
  • stratum (bourgeois, peasants…)
  • Class: similar power level, wealth distribution, privileges or access to resources (capitalism)
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3
Q

Inequality related to power structures

trends

A

Bigger the population, the bigger the power, and the need of it

Power trend to perpetuate and magnify, eg. hereditary monarchy

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4
Q

Inequality by power in different areas

A

Economics (unequal distribution of income and opportunity)

Health (social factors influence on how healthy a person is)

Education (education determines social outcomes, basic education = 3x more likely poverty, socio-economic status determines how well students perform)

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5
Q

Discrimination

Definition

A

Treating differently, negatively and adversely people on grounds of their racial or ethnic origin, religion or beliefs, disability, age and sexual orientation

(high experienced age discrimination and witnessed, high racial)

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6
Q

Discrimination

Stereotypes, prejudice and discrimination

A
  • General attributions
  • Hostile attitude against someone just because they
    belong to a particular collective
    Hot: open one, from emotions
    Cold: politically incorrect
  • intolerance actions, social exclusion and marginalization
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7
Q

Discrimination

Forms

A
  • Direct: treated unfavourably
  • Indirect: policy or rule that puts someone at a disadvantage
  • Victimization: mistreated because complain about discrimination or supported a victim
  • Harassment: unwanted behaviour that makes them feel intimidated, offended or humiliated
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8
Q

Abuse

Definition

A

behaviour that is intended to harm another person who is motivated to avoid that harm :

  • observable behaviour
  • intentional
  • goal of harming
  • towards objects doesn’t count unless carried out with the intention of harming another person

Violence is an extreme form of aggression: severe physical harm as its goal

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9
Q

Abuse

Violence against women

A

UN:
Any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual, or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether in public or in private

35% of women, physical and/or sexual (by partner and non-partner.
National studies: 70% (intimate partner violence)

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10
Q

Abuse

Violence against vulnerable women

A

Certain characteristics- sexual orientation, disability, status, ethnicity or some contextual factors, increase women’s vulnerability to violence

23% non-heterosexual (non-partner) compared to 5% hetero

24% 11-14y disabled compared to 12% non-disabled

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11
Q

Sexism

A

attitude of prejudice against women and gender dissident.
- Heterosexism: sexism with “positive” attitudes
- Sexism as a gender ideology: pool of beliefs about the roles, characteristics, behaviours… considered appropriate for men
or women.

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12
Q

Theory of social dominance and sexism

A

oppression derives from predisposition of humans for hierarchies.
- accumulation of individual discrimination
- accumulation of institutional discrimination
- behavioural assymetry

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13
Q

Palpable forms or hostiles of sexism

A

Classic sexism: based on inferiority or difference of women as a group

3 ideas:
- dominator paternalism
- competitive gender differentiation
- heterosexual hostility (femme fatal vs virgin mary)

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14
Q

Neosexism (postsexism)

A

Political conceptions about gender equality
Feminist demands can be perceived as a threat to traditional values and excessive
Conservative against positive action

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15
Q

Ambivalent sexism

A

Coexistence of + and - feelings towards women
Benign sexism: positive affective - prosocial behaviour (i.e. help)
Still sexism because it relies of traditional domination of the male
Benign sexists don’t feel sexist, so dangerous

  • weaken resistence to patriarchy among women who accept traditional roles
  • linked to levels of hostile sexism and with objective measures of gender inequality
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