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    Poverty Among Women For centuries, gender, race, ethnicity, and age, have contributed to the social stratification of persons in society, and more specifically,

  2. Old Women In Poverty

    Old Women In Poverty Old Women in Poverty. For the last several decades well being of older Americans has increased, and poverty rates have declined noticeably.

  3. Hiv Among Young Women

    hiv among young women It has been more than two decades since the commencement of the HIV/AIDS epidemic; over 60 million people have been infected with the HIV virus,

  4. Homeless Women

    homeless women Homelessness and extreme poverty are distant realities for many of us. However our brief encounters with the homeless reinforce biases and perceptions

  5. Feminizatin Of Poverty

    to become more self-sufficient. Formal or informal strategies alone are insufficient to handle poverty levels among women. There must be a partnership between formal

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Poverty Among Women

Submitted by jobcool00 on December 19, 2006

Category: American History
Words: 1101 | Pages: 5
Views: 284
Popularity Rank: 47,349
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

For centuries, gender, race, ethnicity, and age, have contributed to the social stratification of persons in society, and more specifically, for the means of this essay, women in society. In the United States for example, gender and age greatly contribute to whether or not one will be subject to a life of poverty. In Cultural Anthropology: A Problem Based Approach, Robbins discusses the book Women and Children Last by Ruth Sidel in which Sidel draws a comparison between the Titanic and American society in the 1980's. "Both were gleaming symbols of wealth that placed women and children at a disadvantage" (Robbins, 239). When the Titanic went down that night, the women and children traveling first and second-class were the first to be saved, but the women and children in third-class and steerage were either the last ones to be saved or rather not saved at all, so much so that 45 percent of the women and 70 percent of the children in steerage died. Sidel claims that the same way certain women and children on board the Titanic were the last to be saved, in the United States as well, certain women and children are not the first to be saved, but rather the first ones to fall into poverty.
Race and ethnicity as well have contributed to the social stratification of different groups in society. For a long time, to be part of a certain racial or ethnic group essentially decided ones place in the social hierarchy. Most people had little trouble convincing themselves that race and ethnicity play a key factor in the justification of racial stratification, especially when the state and religious authorities reinforced this idea. To additionally reinforce racial superiority, scientist Samuel George Morton conducted an experiment in which he falsely claimed to prove that whites were not only socially superior, but biologically superior to blacks and American Indians. While it was later discovered by Harvard biologist Edward Jay Gould that Morton's measurements were in...

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