The correct answer is that stratification involves beliefs. We call social stratification a system through which a society hierarchically ranks categories of people. Differences in status, power, and wealth within a certain society are what led to social stratification. Social stratification is based on four major principles:
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It is a trait of society, not simply a reflection of individual differences.
- It persists over generations.
- It's universal (it happens everywhere) but variable (in different ways across different societies).
- It involves not just inequality but beliefs as well (inequality is rooted in a society's philosophy).
The Balkans are often referred to as the "Powder keg of Europe" because the area saw a number of smaller events that eventually set off much larger ones, leading to World War I. Look at reference.com.
<span>Human societies and their interactions have led to divisions of territories into countries and various other subdivisions. While these divisions are at their root artificial, they are important to geographers in the discussion of interactions of various populations</span>
According to the
census of 1790, there were about seven hundred thousand slaves of African
ancestry lived in the colonies, (precisely 694,280) with the most living in the state of Virginia where <span>292,627 enslaved Africans were counted. Although
there had been some skepticism about the counting that it might be undercounted. </span>
the Clayton Antitrust Act (trustbusting)
the Underwood-Simmons Act (tariff reform)
the Federal Trade Commission (protection of consumers and regulation of business)