Why do nominal characteristics acquire status value? A minimal explanation for status construction.
Why do beliefs that attach different amounts of status to different categories of people become consensually held by the members of a society? We show that two microlevel mechanisms, in combination, imply a system-level tendency toward consensual status beliefs about a nominal characteristic. (1) Status belief diffusion: a person who has no status belief about a characteristic can acquire a status belief about that characteristic from interacting with one or more people who have that status belief. (2) Status belief loss: a person who has a status belief about a characteristic can lose that belief from interacting with one or more people who have the opposite status belief. These mechanisms imply that opposite status beliefs will tend to be lost at equal rates and will tend to be acquired at rates proportional to their prevalence. Therefore, if a status belief ever becomes more prevalent than its opposite, it will increase in prevalence until every person holds it.
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- Sociology
- Socioeconomic Factors
- Social Values
- Social Perception
- Social Identification
- Models, Theoretical
- Humans
- Hierarchy, Social
- Culture
- 4410 Sociology
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Sociology
- Socioeconomic Factors
- Social Values
- Social Perception
- Social Identification
- Models, Theoretical
- Humans
- Hierarchy, Social
- Culture
- 4410 Sociology