18. Thomas Piketty's analysis of tax records from the early 1900s-to-present suggests that wealth concentration among the top 1% of society is. a. natural. b. difficult to measure. shaped by...
18. Thomas Piketty's analysis of tax records from the early 1900s-to-present suggests that wealth concentration among the top 1% of society is. a. natural. b. difficult to measure. shaped by politics and policy approaches. good for everyone in society. c. d. 19. According to research conducted by Norton and Ariely, from University of California - Berkeley, w research participants were asked what kind of wealth distribution they felt was optimal for society, most of the participants, ith high welth chose not to participate, because it was to0 political to do so. chose the United States, because it has the most equal distribution of wealth across all segments of society c. concentration. chose societies with equal, or nearly equal, d. wealth distribution across all segments of b. society While the notion of sex refers to biological characteristics, the concept of gender refers to characteristics. 20. c. phikosophical d. social b. physical 21. Judith Lorber believes that gender is a social institution because it is: within an institution (hospital) that our gender first emerges. a social construction instead of a biological construction. a major structure organ an all-encompassing social norm that controls individuals. b. e. d. izing our day-to-day experiences. 22. child? According to intersex activists, why do parents and surgeons push to assign a sex to a genitally ambiguous The government requires a sex on the birth certificate. a. Psychological studies show that mothers require children with definite sexes. b. The need to assign a gender-appropriate name c. d. Social discomfort and fear of difference 23. Many people believe sex to be an either/or situation (either male or female), but sociologists believe these pure categories are: c not biologically absolute but socially helpful. d. more of an ideal than an absolute. a. distinctly different. b. strictly biological 24. In our society, many people take for granted that sex has only two categories and tend to ignore facts that suggest sex itself is socially constructed. Which of the following is an outcome of this sexual tomization? a. viewing sexual variation as a part of our diversity as a species b. the exclusion of those who don't fit neatly into one category or the other c. the common belief that a person's genitalia do not always correspond to a person's gender d. assumption that gender is fluid Wh ich of the following examples calls into question the two firm categories of sex and gender that dom thinking? a. the notion that men and women are equals the existence of more than two gender gro other cultures the existence of gender stereotypes c. b, the existence of male and female teams in sports d.
18. Thomas Piketty's analysis of tax records from the early 1900s-to-present suggests that wealth concentration among the top 1% of society is. a. natural. b. difficult to measure. shaped by politics and policy approaches. good for everyone in society. c. d. 19. According to research conducted by Norton and Ariely, from University of California - Berkeley, w research participants were asked what kind of wealth distribution they felt was optimal for society, most of the participants, ith high welth chose not to participate, because it was to0 political to do so. chose the United States, because it has the most equal distribution of wealth across all segments of society c. concentration. chose societies with equal, or nearly equal, d. wealth distribution across all segments of b. society While the notion of sex refers to biological characteristics, the concept of gender refers to characteristics. 20. c. phikosophical d. social b. physical 21. Judith Lorber believes that gender is a social institution because it is: within an institution (hospital) that our gender first emerges. a social construction instead of a biological construction. a major structure organ an all-encompassing social norm that controls individuals. b. e. d. izing our day-to-day experiences. 22. child? According to intersex activists, why do parents and surgeons push to assign a sex to a genitally ambiguous The government requires a sex on the birth certificate. a. Psychological studies show that mothers require children with definite sexes. b. The need to assign a gender-appropriate name c. d. Social discomfort and fear of difference 23. Many people believe sex to be an either/or situation (either male or female), but sociologists believe these pure categories are: c not biologically absolute but socially helpful. d. more of an ideal than an absolute. a. distinctly different. b. strictly biological 24. In our society, many people take for granted that sex has only two categories and tend to ignore facts that suggest sex itself is socially constructed. Which of the following is an outcome of this sexual tomization? a. viewing sexual variation as a part of our diversity as a species b. the exclusion of those who don't fit neatly into one category or the other c. the common belief that a person's genitalia do not always correspond to a person's gender d. assumption that gender is fluid Wh ich of the following examples calls into question the two firm categories of sex and gender that dom thinking? a. the notion that men and women are equals the existence of more than two gender gro other cultures the existence of gender stereotypes c. b, the existence of male and female teams in sports d.