preview

Project One with Film

Decent Essays

The hierarchical ranking of people who have different access to valued resources is referred to as social networking. the diversification of society. multiculturalism. social stratification. social control. A group of people who have similar social standing based on wealth, property, education, power, and/or prestige is called a/n social category. social class. social caste. social group. social aggregate. In the U.S., the top one percent of U.S. households has _____ of all wealth and _____ of all income. 10%; 20% 17%; 34% 29%; 59% 34%; 17% 52%; 34% Funeral directors earn a healthy salary, but score low on the occupational prestige scale. This is an example of role reversal. role discrepancy. status inconsistency. status roles. a bad …show more content…

To “earn” some extra cash, be began selling fraudulent tickets at the Civic Center. According to Merton, Henry is a/n conformist. innovator. ritualist. retreatist. rebel According to conflict theorists, _____ control the law and therefore define what is and isn’t deviant and criminal. the richest in society the oldest in society the most politically active in society the most powerful in society none of the above “What you’re raised with you grow to become.” This statement exemplifies which symbolic interaction perspective? differential association labeling strain crime control conflict According to _____, being a deviant or a criminal depends on how others react. labeling theory differential association theory strain theory subcultural theory opportunity theory _____ is the spontaneous and unstructured behavior of a large number of people. A social movement Collective behavior Mass hysteria Panic A riot According to Smelser, there are six determinants that encourage or discourage collective behavior. Which of the following is not one of these determinants? structural conduciveness structural strain growth and spread of a generalized belief mobilizing people for action structural management _____ is/are stories that supposedly happened to someone else, like the folktales we covered earlier in

Get Access