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Exam (elaborations)

Functionalist views on social inequality

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Extremely detailed essay plan on Functionalist's view of social inequality. Includes introduction, conclusion, key theorists, explanations and evaluations. Earned an A* overall and above 90% in all class tests.

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November 11, 2025
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Written in
2025/2026
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Functionalist views on social inequality:

Intro:
 Functionalists have a consensus view of society. They believe that
people in society work together for the common good of all, this is
known as the organic analogy
 All societies are unequal. Inequality of whole groups in the social
structure is known as stratification
 Functionalists believe stratification is good for society
 Functionalists say that the best people get the best jobs because
they are more talented and work harder. Poor people are poor
because they do not work hard enough for the best positions

Point 1: Parsons’ view
AO2:
 Parsons believed that we are stratified based on our collective
values. Therefore, those who perform successfully in terms of
society’s values will be ranked highly and received reward/prestige
 For example, in our society, we place great importance on financial
success - therefore anyone who achieves this will be rewarded with
wealth, high status and often power
 The common value system that we share helps to justify these
rewards and prevents too many “sour grapes” from those who don’t
succeed
 The education system provides society with people equipped with
the right skills to do the jobs society needs. This makes sure the
best/most qualified people end up doing the jobs that utilises and
recognises these skills, qualifications and individual effort
 This creates what is termed as the division of labour - whereby the
world of work is fragmented into a large number of specialised jobs
 From this position, the inequalities in society are fair and just,
everyone is given an equal chance, it’s merely that some people
work hard and succeed and others choose to be idle, mess about in
class and only have themselves to blame for their failure
AO3:
 Marxists view stratification as actually divisive, and a way of
exploiting people rather than furthering collective goals or value
consensus
 They believe inequality is not fair or functional, but the result of
capitalist exploitation
 The bourgeoisie keeps the proletariat oppressed to maintain power
and wealth. Far from being based on merit, the distribution of wealth
and power reflects a system where the ruling class maintains
dominance by controlling resources and shaping ideology through
institutions like education and the media, which Althusser later
called the ideological state apparatus
 Bourdieu’s concept of cultural capital supports the Marxist argument
by showing the middle-class families pass down advantages which
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