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Exam (elaborations)

New Right views on social inequality

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Extremely detailed essay plan on New Right views on 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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Uploaded on
November 11, 2025
Number of pages
3
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
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Questions & answers

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New Right views on inequality:

Intro:
 New Right theories developed from a combination of extreme
conservatism and Functionalism
 It is very significant politically, but has not been adopted by many
sociologists as a mainstream way of analysing society
 Neoliberalism is a theory of economics that suggests governments
cannot run economies efficiently. It argues that control of services
should be left to commercial companies. People can then make
rational choices about how they spend her money

Point 1: The Underclass
AO2:
 Murray is linked to underclass theory, where he claimed that the UK
is developing an underclass of people with a culture characterised
by crime, unemployment and illegitimacy
 Women who are unmarried are unable to control their children. Lack
of a father causes children to be badly socialised
 This results in poor educational attainment and criminality
 An entire class of people is developing who are welfare dependent
and unwilling/unable to help themselves
 He blames the rise in single parenthood, which he associates young
single mothers, with being the cause of rising crime
 He claims the underclass consists of the very poorest people in
society, those for whom crime has become a way of life
 Benefits are too generous, and this means that people prefer to
survive on benefits rather than getting work
AO3:
 Marxists argue that Murray ignores the root causes of poverty, like
class inequality, capitalism and lack of opportunity
 They say that the working class are not to blame for their position,
instead inequality is produced by the economic system itself
 Bourdieu talks about cultural capital and how working-class people
lack the resources and networks to succeed, not the will
 Erik Ohlin Wright argues that Murray oversimplifies class by blaming
individuals instead of power structures and exploitation
 Marxists reject the idea of a “culture of poverty” and argue poverty
is imposed, not chosen

Point 2: The cycle of criminality
AO2:
 Murray believes that a culture of dependency creates and leads to
crime
 Crime and benefit dependency means that fathers do not have to
look after their children, leading to single parenthood among
women, which means mothers survive on benefits
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