Page 1
UNDERCLASS
Underclass refers to the group of people who due to lack of employment, skills,
income, wealth or property appear to stand outside ordinary society.
The term underclass was used by Charles Murray in 1984 to describe a
permanent or persistent poverty population whose lower-income status passes
from one generation to the next because of intrinsically dysfunctional
behaviors.
Charles Murray-
Murray said: “the underclass are defined by their behaviour. Their homes are
littered and unkempt. The men in the family are unable to hold down a job.
Drunkenness is common. The children grew up ill-schooled and ill-behaved and
contribute to a disproportionate share of juvenile delinquents”
Murray saw underclass as behaviour a lifestyle choice, a disease which infects
people who share many of the following characteristics (female headed lone
parents, out-of-wedlock-births, school drop-outs, violent and criminal.
William Julius Wilson –
The underclass comprises of those who lack training or skills, are out of the
labor force or long-term unemployed, and who engage in deviant behavior.
Wilson also incorporates in his definition family instability and welfare
dependency.
Erol Ricketts and Isabel Sawhill –
produced an empirically operational definition of an underclass area where a
census tract has rates of high school dropouts, male labor-force nonattachment,
welfare recipiency, and female-family headship one standard deviation above
the mean for the country as a whole. A person who lives in such a census tract
and who engages in socially deviant behavior is considered by Ricketts and
Sawhill to be in the underclass.
These definitions of the underclass share many of the features of earlier
conceptualizations of populations at the lowest rungs of the social and
economic ladder. Karl Marx described the lumpenproletariat as “the lowest
sediment of the relative surplus population,” an unproductive and regressive
portion of the population unable or unwilling to work
Page 2
UNDERCLASS
Underclass refers to the group of people who due to lack of employment, skills,
income, wealth or property appear to stand outside ordinary society.
The term underclass was used by Charles Murray in 1984 to describe a
permanent or persistent poverty population whose lower-income status passes
from one generation to the next because of intrinsically dysfunctional
behaviors.
Charles Murray-
Murray said: “the underclass are defined by their behaviour. Their homes are
littered and unkempt. The men in the family are unable to hold down a job.
Drunkenness is common. The children grew up ill-schooled and ill-behaved and
contribute to a disproportionate share of juvenile delinquents”
Murray saw underclass as behaviour a lifestyle choice, a disease which infects
people who share many of the following characteristics (female headed lone
parents, out-of-wedlock-births, school drop-outs, violent and criminal.
William Julius Wilson –
The underclass comprises of those who lack training or skills, are out of the
labor force or long-term unemployed, and who engage in deviant behavior.
Wilson also incorporates in his definition family instability and welfare
dependency.
Erol Ricketts and Isabel Sawhill –
produced an empirically operational definition of an underclass area where a
census tract has rates of high school dropouts, male labor-force nonattachment,
welfare recipiency, and female-family headship one standard deviation above
the mean for the country as a whole. A person who lives in such a census tract
and who engages in socially deviant behavior is considered by Ricketts and
Sawhill to be in the underclass.
These definitions of the underclass share many of the features of earlier
conceptualizations of populations at the lowest rungs of the social and
economic ladder. Karl Marx described the lumpenproletariat as “the lowest
sediment of the relative surplus population,” an unproductive and regressive
portion of the population unable or unwilling to work
Causes-
1. Cultural
For Murray (1984), the responsibility for criminal involvement, children born
out of wedlock, joblessness, and dependency on welfare rests upon the
shoulders of members of the underclass themselves. The underclass reproduces
its behavior from one generation to the next, just as it perpetually reproduces
itself, through excessive unwanted births to teenage mothers and unemployed
or unemployable fathers.
2. Structural
the underlying causes are more broadly found in the larger context of structural
transformations in the economy. Wilson points out that Joblessness in the inner
city arises in part from the flight of low-skilled and semiskilled jobs from their
historic location in central cities. Social isolation and concentration of poverty
are but consequences of these structural transformations.
RACE AND THE UNDERCLASS
The relation between the two concepts has been deliberated by many
researchers.
Using 1980 U.S. census data, Ricketts and Sawhill - calculate that 59 percent of
persons in underclass areas were black.
It was generally understood that underclass areas are disproportionately poor
and black.Indeed, the term black underclass was often used synonymously with
the term underclass. This is so because blacks are disproportionately found
among each of the key definitional components of the underclass:
concentrations of poverty and labor-force withdrawal; high rates of criminality;
and high rates of female-family headship.
Race is highly correlated with place. Low social capital and deviant behavior can
be thought of as a manifestation of place or a concentration of pathology in
particular neighborhoods. Location in particular neighborhoods, though, could
be traced to redlining, mortgage discrimination, and other housing barriers that
Page 3
UNDERCLASS
Underclass refers to the group of people who due to lack of employment, skills,
income, wealth or property appear to stand outside ordinary society.
The term underclass was used by Charles Murray in 1984 to describe a
permanent or persistent poverty population whose lower-income status passes
from one generation to the next because of intrinsically dysfunctional
behaviors.
Charles Murray-
Murray said: “the underclass are defined by their behaviour. Their homes are
littered and unkempt. The men in the family are unable to hold down a job.
Drunkenness is common. The children grew up ill-schooled and ill-behaved and
contribute to a disproportionate share of juvenile delinquents”
Murray saw underclass as behaviour a lifestyle choice, a disease which infects
people who share many of the following characteristics (female headed lone
parents, out-of-wedlock-births, school drop-outs, violent and criminal.
William Julius Wilson –
The underclass comprises of those who lack training or skills, are out of the
labor force or long-term unemployed, and who engage in deviant behavior.
Wilson also incorporates in his definition family instability and welfare
dependency.
Erol Ricketts and Isabel Sawhill –
produced an empirically operational definition of an underclass area where a
census tract has rates of high school dropouts, male labor-force nonattachment,
welfare recipiency, and female-family headship one standard deviation above
the mean for the country as a whole. A person who lives in such a census tract
and who engages in socially deviant behavior is considered by Ricketts and
Sawhill to be in the underclass.
These definitions of the underclass share many of the features of earlier
conceptualizations of populations at the lowest rungs of the social and
economic ladder. Karl Marx described the lumpenproletariat as “the lowest
sediment of the relative surplus population,” an unproductive and regressive
portion of the population unable or unwilling to work
Causes-
1. Cultural
For Murray (1984), the responsibility for criminal involvement, children born
out of wedlock, joblessness, and dependency on welfare rests upon the
shoulders of members of the underclass themselves. The underclass reproduces
its behavior from one generation to the next, just as it perpetually reproduces
itself, through excessive unwanted births to teenage mothers and unemployed
or unemployable fathers.
2. Structural
the underlying causes are more broadly found in the larger context of structural
transformations in the economy. Wilson points out that Joblessness in the inner
city arises in part from the flight of low-skilled and semiskilled jobs from their
historic location in central cities. Social isolation and concentration of poverty
are but consequences of these structural transformations.
RACE AND THE UNDERCLASS
The relation between the two concepts has been deliberated by many
researchers.
Using 1980 U.S. census data, Ricketts and Sawhill - calculate that 59 percent of
persons in underclass areas were black.
It was generally understood that underclass areas are disproportionately poor
and black.Indeed, the term black underclass was often used synonymously with
the term underclass. This is so because blacks are disproportionately found
among each of the key definitional components of the underclass:
concentrations of poverty and labor-force withdrawal; high rates of criminality;
and high rates of female-family headship.
Race is highly correlated with place. Low social capital and deviant behavior can
be thought of as a manifestation of place or a concentration of pathology in
particular neighborhoods. Location in particular neighborhoods, though, could
be traced to redlining, mortgage discrimination, and other housing barriers that
can be seen as manifestations of race (Wilson 1987; Stoll 2005; Massey and
Denton 1993; Jargowsky 1997).
As a result of migration:
In many cases, it is observed that members of a particular ethnic group have
similar economic status in a society. In India, certain ethnic minorities perform
extremely well while some others are deprived of the basic socio-economic
benefits.
One of the primary causes of migration is the pull factor of better economic
opportunities. In case of cross country or cross state migration, the migrated
group is seen as a distinct ethnic group. It is usually the poorest of the group
whose survival is under question that migrate to farther off lands.
Since their immediate need is economic independence, they may even take up
menial jobs and adjust with poor working and living conditions. Further influx of
people occurs through contacts and they tend to settle down at particular
locations and work in particular sectors.
At this initial stage, they do not demand political rights since they do not wish to
confront the majority group.That translates to their being underpaid, no job
security as they are increasingly used as disposable labour. This sets in the
process of development of negative stereotypes for that particular ethnicity
which is largely seen as the underclass of society doing the low paid work and
living in poor conditions.
Hence, setting a relation between ethnicity and underclass.
Such a scenario can be dealt in two ways by the society:
1) Assimilation- where active effort is made to include the migrated
population in the economy and society, example- giving benefits through
schemes like PDS, voting rights, etc.
Example:120
th
century migrations to US & Canada -> Indians took Truck driver
& Taxidriver jobs.
Page 4
UNDERCLASS
Underclass refers to the group of people who due to lack of employment, skills,
income, wealth or property appear to stand outside ordinary society.
The term underclass was used by Charles Murray in 1984 to describe a
permanent or persistent poverty population whose lower-income status passes
from one generation to the next because of intrinsically dysfunctional
behaviors.
Charles Murray-
Murray said: “the underclass are defined by their behaviour. Their homes are
littered and unkempt. The men in the family are unable to hold down a job.
Drunkenness is common. The children grew up ill-schooled and ill-behaved and
contribute to a disproportionate share of juvenile delinquents”
Murray saw underclass as behaviour a lifestyle choice, a disease which infects
people who share many of the following characteristics (female headed lone
parents, out-of-wedlock-births, school drop-outs, violent and criminal.
William Julius Wilson –
The underclass comprises of those who lack training or skills, are out of the
labor force or long-term unemployed, and who engage in deviant behavior.
Wilson also incorporates in his definition family instability and welfare
dependency.
Erol Ricketts and Isabel Sawhill –
produced an empirically operational definition of an underclass area where a
census tract has rates of high school dropouts, male labor-force nonattachment,
welfare recipiency, and female-family headship one standard deviation above
the mean for the country as a whole. A person who lives in such a census tract
and who engages in socially deviant behavior is considered by Ricketts and
Sawhill to be in the underclass.
These definitions of the underclass share many of the features of earlier
conceptualizations of populations at the lowest rungs of the social and
economic ladder. Karl Marx described the lumpenproletariat as “the lowest
sediment of the relative surplus population,” an unproductive and regressive
portion of the population unable or unwilling to work
Causes-
1. Cultural
For Murray (1984), the responsibility for criminal involvement, children born
out of wedlock, joblessness, and dependency on welfare rests upon the
shoulders of members of the underclass themselves. The underclass reproduces
its behavior from one generation to the next, just as it perpetually reproduces
itself, through excessive unwanted births to teenage mothers and unemployed
or unemployable fathers.
2. Structural
the underlying causes are more broadly found in the larger context of structural
transformations in the economy. Wilson points out that Joblessness in the inner
city arises in part from the flight of low-skilled and semiskilled jobs from their
historic location in central cities. Social isolation and concentration of poverty
are but consequences of these structural transformations.
RACE AND THE UNDERCLASS
The relation between the two concepts has been deliberated by many
researchers.
Using 1980 U.S. census data, Ricketts and Sawhill - calculate that 59 percent of
persons in underclass areas were black.
It was generally understood that underclass areas are disproportionately poor
and black.Indeed, the term black underclass was often used synonymously with
the term underclass. This is so because blacks are disproportionately found
among each of the key definitional components of the underclass:
concentrations of poverty and labor-force withdrawal; high rates of criminality;
and high rates of female-family headship.
Race is highly correlated with place. Low social capital and deviant behavior can
be thought of as a manifestation of place or a concentration of pathology in
particular neighborhoods. Location in particular neighborhoods, though, could
be traced to redlining, mortgage discrimination, and other housing barriers that
can be seen as manifestations of race (Wilson 1987; Stoll 2005; Massey and
Denton 1993; Jargowsky 1997).
As a result of migration:
In many cases, it is observed that members of a particular ethnic group have
similar economic status in a society. In India, certain ethnic minorities perform
extremely well while some others are deprived of the basic socio-economic
benefits.
One of the primary causes of migration is the pull factor of better economic
opportunities. In case of cross country or cross state migration, the migrated
group is seen as a distinct ethnic group. It is usually the poorest of the group
whose survival is under question that migrate to farther off lands.
Since their immediate need is economic independence, they may even take up
menial jobs and adjust with poor working and living conditions. Further influx of
people occurs through contacts and they tend to settle down at particular
locations and work in particular sectors.
At this initial stage, they do not demand political rights since they do not wish to
confront the majority group.That translates to their being underpaid, no job
security as they are increasingly used as disposable labour. This sets in the
process of development of negative stereotypes for that particular ethnicity
which is largely seen as the underclass of society doing the low paid work and
living in poor conditions.
Hence, setting a relation between ethnicity and underclass.
Such a scenario can be dealt in two ways by the society:
1) Assimilation- where active effort is made to include the migrated
population in the economy and society, example- giving benefits through
schemes like PDS, voting rights, etc.
Example:120
th
century migrations to US & Canada -> Indians took Truck driver
& Taxidriver jobs.
21
st
century -> engineers going for Post graduation and high profile jobs in
MNCs -> so stereotype changing
This provides a unique case of assimilation where the migrating group
was able to raise its social status and counter negative stereotypes.
Earlier, they faced social exclusion. Now, increasingly accepted as equal.
It provides a useful insight : inequality & stratification are dynamic
concepts. It is tough to categorise a particular society as open/ close.
Instead degree of openeness present in society must be looked into .
2) Dissimilation- where the mainstream society continues to treat the
migrated population as outsiders and exploits their labour for profits.
Example- Labour from UP and Bihar to Punjab, Maharashtra
Migration is encouraged and the migrated labour is even preferred than the
domestic labour. But no cultural interactions like celebrating each other’s
festival, etc. They are treated as inferiors and referred to with colloquial words
– ‘bhaiya’ which gives them an identity markedly different from mainstream
society and carries a negative connoation.
Summary:
Jobless from the poor countries migrate -> take menial jobs ->economic
security is the immediate goal, no demand for political rights ->further
migration through contacts -> people accommodated in similar work ->
concentration of a particular ethnicity in an economic sector ->Negative
stereotypes develop.
Why Underclass?
- Usually poorest migrate (rich & able of that ethnicity wont, so people able
to see only 1 side of coin)
- Core ethnic group uses them rather than assimilated them.
Page 5
UNDERCLASS
Underclass refers to the group of people who due to lack of employment, skills,
income, wealth or property appear to stand outside ordinary society.
The term underclass was used by Charles Murray in 1984 to describe a
permanent or persistent poverty population whose lower-income status passes
from one generation to the next because of intrinsically dysfunctional
behaviors.
Charles Murray-
Murray said: “the underclass are defined by their behaviour. Their homes are
littered and unkempt. The men in the family are unable to hold down a job.
Drunkenness is common. The children grew up ill-schooled and ill-behaved and
contribute to a disproportionate share of juvenile delinquents”
Murray saw underclass as behaviour a lifestyle choice, a disease which infects
people who share many of the following characteristics (female headed lone
parents, out-of-wedlock-births, school drop-outs, violent and criminal.
William Julius Wilson –
The underclass comprises of those who lack training or skills, are out of the
labor force or long-term unemployed, and who engage in deviant behavior.
Wilson also incorporates in his definition family instability and welfare
dependency.
Erol Ricketts and Isabel Sawhill –
produced an empirically operational definition of an underclass area where a
census tract has rates of high school dropouts, male labor-force nonattachment,
welfare recipiency, and female-family headship one standard deviation above
the mean for the country as a whole. A person who lives in such a census tract
and who engages in socially deviant behavior is considered by Ricketts and
Sawhill to be in the underclass.
These definitions of the underclass share many of the features of earlier
conceptualizations of populations at the lowest rungs of the social and
economic ladder. Karl Marx described the lumpenproletariat as “the lowest
sediment of the relative surplus population,” an unproductive and regressive
portion of the population unable or unwilling to work
Causes-
1. Cultural
For Murray (1984), the responsibility for criminal involvement, children born
out of wedlock, joblessness, and dependency on welfare rests upon the
shoulders of members of the underclass themselves. The underclass reproduces
its behavior from one generation to the next, just as it perpetually reproduces
itself, through excessive unwanted births to teenage mothers and unemployed
or unemployable fathers.
2. Structural
the underlying causes are more broadly found in the larger context of structural
transformations in the economy. Wilson points out that Joblessness in the inner
city arises in part from the flight of low-skilled and semiskilled jobs from their
historic location in central cities. Social isolation and concentration of poverty
are but consequences of these structural transformations.
RACE AND THE UNDERCLASS
The relation between the two concepts has been deliberated by many
researchers.
Using 1980 U.S. census data, Ricketts and Sawhill - calculate that 59 percent of
persons in underclass areas were black.
It was generally understood that underclass areas are disproportionately poor
and black.Indeed, the term black underclass was often used synonymously with
the term underclass. This is so because blacks are disproportionately found
among each of the key definitional components of the underclass:
concentrations of poverty and labor-force withdrawal; high rates of criminality;
and high rates of female-family headship.
Race is highly correlated with place. Low social capital and deviant behavior can
be thought of as a manifestation of place or a concentration of pathology in
particular neighborhoods. Location in particular neighborhoods, though, could
be traced to redlining, mortgage discrimination, and other housing barriers that
can be seen as manifestations of race (Wilson 1987; Stoll 2005; Massey and
Denton 1993; Jargowsky 1997).
As a result of migration:
In many cases, it is observed that members of a particular ethnic group have
similar economic status in a society. In India, certain ethnic minorities perform
extremely well while some others are deprived of the basic socio-economic
benefits.
One of the primary causes of migration is the pull factor of better economic
opportunities. In case of cross country or cross state migration, the migrated
group is seen as a distinct ethnic group. It is usually the poorest of the group
whose survival is under question that migrate to farther off lands.
Since their immediate need is economic independence, they may even take up
menial jobs and adjust with poor working and living conditions. Further influx of
people occurs through contacts and they tend to settle down at particular
locations and work in particular sectors.
At this initial stage, they do not demand political rights since they do not wish to
confront the majority group.That translates to their being underpaid, no job
security as they are increasingly used as disposable labour. This sets in the
process of development of negative stereotypes for that particular ethnicity
which is largely seen as the underclass of society doing the low paid work and
living in poor conditions.
Hence, setting a relation between ethnicity and underclass.
Such a scenario can be dealt in two ways by the society:
1) Assimilation- where active effort is made to include the migrated
population in the economy and society, example- giving benefits through
schemes like PDS, voting rights, etc.
Example:120
th
century migrations to US & Canada -> Indians took Truck driver
& Taxidriver jobs.
21
st
century -> engineers going for Post graduation and high profile jobs in
MNCs -> so stereotype changing
This provides a unique case of assimilation where the migrating group
was able to raise its social status and counter negative stereotypes.
Earlier, they faced social exclusion. Now, increasingly accepted as equal.
It provides a useful insight : inequality & stratification are dynamic
concepts. It is tough to categorise a particular society as open/ close.
Instead degree of openeness present in society must be looked into .
2) Dissimilation- where the mainstream society continues to treat the
migrated population as outsiders and exploits their labour for profits.
Example- Labour from UP and Bihar to Punjab, Maharashtra
Migration is encouraged and the migrated labour is even preferred than the
domestic labour. But no cultural interactions like celebrating each other’s
festival, etc. They are treated as inferiors and referred to with colloquial words
– ‘bhaiya’ which gives them an identity markedly different from mainstream
society and carries a negative connoation.
Summary:
Jobless from the poor countries migrate -> take menial jobs ->economic
security is the immediate goal, no demand for political rights ->further
migration through contacts -> people accommodated in similar work ->
concentration of a particular ethnicity in an economic sector ->Negative
stereotypes develop.
Why Underclass?
- Usually poorest migrate (rich & able of that ethnicity wont, so people able
to see only 1 side of coin)
- Core ethnic group uses them rather than assimilated them.
- Ethnic minority develops self doubt.
- Economic insecurity -> so collective mobilization in minority not
immediate (Not a class as consciousness lacks)
Dependent on state for benefits so don’t oppose.
- Constitute maximum of poor people : so study of ethnicity important to
understand society.
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