Ascribed status

Ascribed status

Ascribed status is the social status a person is given from birth or assumes involuntarily later in life. For example, a person born into a wealthy family has a high ascribed status. In contrast, an achieved status is a social position a person takes on voluntarily that reflects personal ability and merit. Also when a person's position in society is fixed (or ascribed to him or her by others) on the basis of family background or genetic inheritance. Racial, ethnic, and religious differences, as well as gender, often serve as the basis for ascribed status. Other people that are born into ascribed status are people born into royalty. Since the child came into the world with their care givers having royal lineage, the child has inherited those royal blood lines as well.

Factors

The various factors which determine ascribed status are:

*Age
*Kinship
*Sex
*Race
*Group
*Caste

In addition to ascription, at birth there are also:
*Delayed Ascription - When the social status is given at a later stage of life
*Fluid Ascription - When the ascribed status leads to an achieved status

Types of statuses in Upper Class Population

*The Ascribed Status - an inherited status which symbolises ownership of wealth and vast land. The royal family fall into this category
*The 'Pop Aristocracy' in which famous people who originated from working and middle class background made their money. Football players, actors and the like are included in this category.
*Achieved Status - the last group of upper class are the entrepreneurs. They will have made their money from business. Firstly starting with a small family business, they slowly expanded and made their wealth in this way.

Religion

Being wealthy does not necessarily describe all of ascribed status. Religion is also a factor in ascribed status as well. If you family is born a specific religion be it Christian, Hindu, Muslim, etc., you are proclaimed that status at birth because of your upbringing. Ascribed status can also be closely linked with master status as they both involve what you were born with although master status is a broader term and looks at more topics than ascribed status. Another way to look at ascribed status is through the caste system in India.

Caste system

The caste system in India long has been an extreme example of a stratification structure based on ascribed status. Each level in the stratification structure is known as a caste. Everyone is born belonging to a specific caste. The caste of the parents thus generally determines the status of their children, regardless of ability or merit. The ranks of the caste system include:

*Brahmins- These is the highest rank of the whole caste system. The Brahmins consist of all priests, scholars, and enlightened people that have been through many lives.

*Kshatriyas- These are the rulers, warriors, and those concerned with the defense and administration of the well-being of their town or village.

*Vaishyas- These people consisted of all the traders, merchants, and people involved in agricultural production

*Sudra- These people are the lowest of the caste system. Hindu religion believes this class is where first life starts. The sudras spend most of their time being the laborers and servants for the other castes.

*Untouchables- The untouchables are the lowest of the low. They are so low that they do not have a place in the caste system. The jobs of these people include the cleaning of dead bodies and fecal excrement.

ee also

* Achieved status
* Social status
* Master status
* List of sociology topics
* Sociology


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • ascribed status — noun The social status a person that is given from birth or assumes involuntarily later in life. Ant: achieved status …   Wiktionary

  • ascribed status — Sociol. the social position assigned to a person on the basis of age, sex, race, etc. Cf. achieved status. [1965 70] * * * …   Universalium

  • ascribed status — See ascription ; status, achieved …   Dictionary of sociology

  • ascribed status — Sociol. the social position assigned to a person on the basis of age, sex, race, etc. Cf. achieved status. [1965 70] …   Useful english dictionary

  • ascribed — status …   Dictionary of sociology

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  • Status shift — A status shift requires a conversion experience, acquiring a new and overwhelming primary identity, such as becoming a born again Christian. Some statuses are mutually exclusive, like black and white, or male and female. Other statuses aren’t… …   Wikipedia

  • Status attainment — or status attainment theory deals largely with one’s position in society, or class. Status attainment is affected by both achieved factors, such as educational attainment, and ascribed factors, such as family income. It is achieved by a… …   Wikipedia

  • status attainment — status attainment, status attainment theory An extensive literature investigating how educational achievements and other indicators of skill and ability translate into jobs ranked according to socio economic status or prestige . The classic… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • ascribed — adjective Date: 1969 acquired or assigned arbitrarily (as at birth) < ascribed social status > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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