Poverty as a Social Construct: Examining the Role of Societal Structures and Institutions

In today’s world, poverty is a social construct created and perpetuated by societal structures and institutions. The article “Poverty Is a Social Construct” discusses how poverty is not a natural phenomenon but a consequence of societal systems that maintain inequality.
This is reviewed in the article “From the American Dream to a Welfare Nightmare,” which explores the history of welfare in the United States and how it has failed to address the root causes of poverty. The article argues that the American Dream of upward mobility is a myth and that the welfare system has been designed to maintain a permanent underclass.

Photo by John Moeses Bauan on Unsplash

The relationship between poverty and societal structures is further explored in “The Wealthy and the Poor and Their Place in Beck’s Risk Society,” which argues that the wealthy benefit from a system that creates and perpetuates poverty. Further, the article suggests that the wealthy have a vested interest in maintaining the status quo, as they benefit from a system that allows them to accumulate wealth at the expense of others.

French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu’s class theory is explored in the article “The Bourdieu Class Theory: A Definition Explanation,” which suggests that social class is not solely based on economic factors…

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Ramblings of a Neurodivergent Mind

Sociology Top Writer — I write about Sociology, Neurodiversity and Creative Writing — not exactly in that order.