Type | Conference Paper - IVth World Congress of Rural Sociology |
Title | Sex Differentials in Educational and Labor Force Role Distributions in the Philippines. |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 1976 |
City | Torun |
Country/State | Poland |
URL | http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED135561.pdf |
Abstract | Modernization theorists operating within the Durkheimian framework have stressed increasing differentiation as a prime component of the modernization process (see, for example, Eisenstadt, 1957; Smelser, 1963; Smelser and Lipset, 1966). Structural differentiation concerns changes in and the proliferation of social roles. For example, modernization produces in its wake new social roles associated with increased literacy and higher levels of educational attainment, changes in the educational curriculum, industrial and occupational transformation, the monetization of the economy and the ecological separation of place of work and residence. However, as Matras (1973: 144) has suggested, ". . . societies sharing social roles and social systems may vary with respect to the way in which their members are distributed among them." Given deficiencies in a society's allocative mechanism, through restrictions on access or recruitment to emergent social roles, various societal subgroups are differentially distributed across a society's role structure. Ascriptive criteria present at birth such as age, sex, place of birth, race and ethnicity oftentimes form the cornerstone for restrictive entree to emergent social roles in the process of modernization and, hence, differen-' tial and, more often than not, inferior placement of selected societal subgroups within the total" role structure of the society. |
» | Philippines - Census of Population and Housing 1970 |