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family wage
income paid to a man that is large enough to support a non-working wife and children
ideology of separate spheres
the idea that the home is a feminine space best tended by women and work is a masculine space best suited to men
heteronormative
promoting heterosexuality as the only or preferred sexual identity making other sexual desires invisible or casting them as inferior
mononormative
promoting monogamy or the requirement that spouses have sexual relations only with each other
pro-natal
promoting childbearing and stigmatizing choosing to go child-free
androcentrism
the production of unjust outcomes for people who perform femininity
partnership unions
a relationship model based on love and companionship between equals
sexism
the production of unjust outcomes for people perceived to be biologically female
hegemonic masculinity
the form of masculinity that constitutes the most widely admired and rewarded kind of person in any given culture
second shift
the unpaid work of housekeeping and childcare that faces family members once they return home from their paid jobs
time-use diary
a research method in which participants are asked to self-report their activities at regular intervals over at least twenty-four hours
ideal worker norm
the idea that an employee should devote themselves to their jobs wholly and without the distraction of family responsibilities
shared division of labor
an arrangement in which both partners do an equal share of paid and unpaid work
specialized division of labor
an arrangement in which one partner does more paid work than childcare and housework and the other does the inverse
ideology of intensive motherhood
the idea that children require concentrated maternal investment
feminization of poverty
a concentration of women and trans women and LGBTW men at the bottom of the income scale and straight white men at the top
glass escalator
an invisible ride to the top offered to men in female-dominated occupations
job segregation
the sorting of people with different social identities into separate occupations
androcentric pay scale
a positive correlation between the number of men in an occupation relative to women and the wages paid to employees
care work
work that involves face-to-face care taking of the physical emotional and educational needs of others
male flight
a phenomenon in which men start abandoning an activity when women start adopting it
stalled revolution
a sweeping change in gender relations that started but has yet to be fully realized
freedom/power paradox
a situation whereby women have more freedom than men but less power and men have more power than women but less freedom
global care chains
a series of nurturing relationships in which the international work of care is displaced onto increasingly disadvantaged paid or unpaid workers
social reproduction
the process by which society maintains an enduring character from generation to generation
power elite
a relatively small group of interconnected people who occupy top positions in important social institutions
pluralist theory of power
the idea that U.S. politics is characterized by competing groups that work together to achieve their goals
elite theory of power
the idea that a small group of networked individuals controls the most powerful positions in our social institutions
social capital
the number of people we know and the resources they can offer us
social closure
a process by which advantaged groups preserve opportunities for themselves while restricting them for others
cultural capital
symbolic resources that communicate one's social status
fit
the feeling that our particular mix of cultural capital matches our social context
ethnography
a research method that involves careful observation of naturally occurring social interaction often as a participant
field
the place or places where ethnographers conduct research
field notes
descriptive accounts of what occurred in the field alongside tentative sociological observations
cultural hegemony
power maintained primarily by persuasion
hegemonic ideologies
shared ideas about how human life should be organized that are used to manufacture our consent to existing social conditions
individualism
the idea that people are independent actors responsible for themselves
collectivism
the idea that people are interdependent actors with responsibilities primarily to the group
xenophobia
prejudice against people defined as foreign
social construction of social problems
the process of coming to see a personal struggle as an issue of public concern
Insurgent consciousness
a recognition of a shared grievance that can be addressed through collective action
collective action problem
the challenge of getting large groups of people to act in coordinated ways
organizational strength
a combination of strong leadership human and material resources social networks and physical infrastructure
political networks
webs of ties that link people with similar political goals
political oppurtunity structure
the strengths and weaknesses in the existing political system that shape the options available to social movement actors
cultural opportunity structure
cultural ideas objects practices or bodies that create or constrain activist strategies
critical events
a sudden and dramatic occurrence that motivates nonactivists to become politically active
economic opportunity structure
the role of money in enabling or limiting a movement's operations and influence
interest convergence
the alignment of the interests of activists and elites
social change
shifts in our shared ideas interactions and institutions
collective action
the coordinated activities of members of groups with shared goals
social movement
persistent and organized collective action meant to promote or oppose social change
interdependent power
the power of noncooperation
repertoire of contention
shared activities widely recognized as expressions of dissatisfaction with social conditions
nation-state system
a world society consisting of only sovereign self-contained territories
global slave trade
the practice of kidnapping human beings and transporting them around the world and selling them for profit
global power elite
a relatively small group of interconnected people who occupy top positions in globally important social institutions
global imagined community
a socially constructed in-group based on a shared planet
risk society
a society organized around the self-conscious production distribution and management of risk
globalization
the social processes that are expanding and intensifying connections across nation-states
cultural hybridization
the production of ideas objects practices and bodies influenced by two or more cultures
transnational organizations
organizations that operate in more than one country
colonialism
the practice by which a nation-state extends political economic and military power beyond its own borders over an extended period of time to secure access to raw materials cheap labor and markets in other countries or regions
global commodity chains
a transnational economic process that involves extracting natural resources transforming them into goods and marketing and distributing them to consumers
global cities
urban areas that act as key hubs in the world economy