Unequal by origin or by necessity? Popular explanations of inequality and their legitimatory implications
Veröffentlichungsdatum
2014-09-29
Autoren
Zusammenfassung
According to an implicit assumption underlying stratification theory and research, citizens in modern societies are supposed to regard inequality as caused by social factors, and therefore in need of legitimation. Based on qualitative interviews with people from both lower and upper social classes in Germany, the article questions this assumption. From the interviews, I reconstruct two divergent interpretive frames that are used to understand the causes of inequality. While one indeed highlights social origin as a prominent social-structural factor and suggests critical normative orientations towards the status quo (‘inequality by origin’), at the same time explanations regarding inequality as an inevitable element of social order exist which suspend legitimatory pressures (‘inevitable inequalities’). Importantly, both interpretive frames co-exist and are used simultaneously within respondents’ reasoning; to the extent that this is the case, the critique evoked by the ‘inequality by origin’ interpretation is eventually undermined.
Schlagwörter
interpretive frame
;
social inequality
;
social stratification
;
social structure
;
stratification beliefs
;
qualitative interviewing
Verlag
Taylor & Francis
Institution
Fachbereich
Dokumenttyp
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Zeitschrift/Sammelwerk
Band
1
Heft
4
Startseite
323
Endseite
346
Zweitveröffentlichung
Ja
Dokumentversion
Postprint
Sprache
Englisch
Dateien![Vorschaubild]()
Lade...
Name
Unequal by origin or by necessity - Popular explanations of inequality and their legitimatory implications.pdf
Size
608.92 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):e6e0999a276294bc14320c0569dec203
