Topic > Maldistribution in organizations - 807

When you leave class, you open the doors that lead you to the outside world and take in a big breath of air. You look around and see different types of people wandering on the same surface you walk on. People have always sought equality among themselves, but equality does not exist. To achieve this, civilization would have to start from scratch. Now, when I talk about equality, I'm referring to the fair distribution of wealth, status and privilege. This has evolved into a significant problem of the modern world. Some are able to buy nicer things than others. Some are allowed much greater access than others. Some are allowed to do things that others cannot. This is known as social inequality, and society sees it as a way to diversify groups and carve up all types of organizations. People may think that different is bad and inequality is a good thing, but if you really take this into consideration, you can really understand that if everyone were equal and equal, the world would be really bland. Nobody wants to be the same. Everyone wants to be different and unique in their own way. Competition drives society. It's about the influence that drives the community. When one sees another develop into something better, people follow. This is politics. One is to influence and gain authority. A person's power, authority, or influence exists in relation to others. Taking in this information leads to understanding how things are not equal and how there is always a higher force that contradicts a lower force. This is the idea of ​​colonization. In "Why People Can't Feed Themselves", the colonial regime took power and authority over the farms and forced them to convert from subsistence farms to cash... middle of paper... ...first rank inferior? This all comes down to opinion and that dominance isn't really in the production lens. Works Cited Angeloni, Elvio. Annual editions: Anthropology, thirty-fourth edition. New York: The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2011. Print.Arenson, Lauren and Miller-Thayer, Jennifer. Cultures of the United States. Michigan: Hayden McNeil Publishing. 2009. Print.Frances, Lappe M. and Collins Joseph. Why can't people feed themselves? 1977. Anthropology 11/12. By Elvio Angeloni. New York: McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Learning Series, 2011. 178-82. Print.John, Bodley. The price of progress. 1998. Anthropology 11/12. By Elvio Angeloni. New York: McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Learning Series, 2011. 199-204. Print.Laura, Graham. The tractor invasion. 2009. Anthropology 11/12. By Elvio Angeloni. New York: McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Learning Series, 2011. 183-87. Press.