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Glossary›Structural Inequality

Glossary

Structural Inequality

Systemic patterns of unequal access to resources, opportunities, and power embedded in institutions rather than individual prejudice alone.

What is Structural Inequality?

Structural inequality refers to the systemic and institutional barriers that create and perpetuate unequal access to resources, opportunities, and outcomes for different social groups within a society. It occurs when the fabric of organizations, institutions, governments or social networks contains an embedded cultural, linguistic, economic, religious/belief, physical or identity based bias which provides advantages for some members and marginalizes or produces disadvantages for other members.

As opposed to cultural inequality, which focuses on the individual decisions associated with these imbalances, structural inequality refers specifically to the inequalities that are systemically rooted in the normal operations of dominant social institutions. Structural inequality is often perpetuated through the unequal distribution of power, resources, and opportunities within social institutions like the education system, the healthcare system, and the criminal justice system. It describes systems which would require dismantling to remove their adverse effects (e.g., removal/rewriting of discriminatory policies).

Structural inequality can manifest in the form of disparities in areas such as income, wealth, employment, education, housing, and access to healthcare and other essential services. Structural inequalities result from power imbalances when one group has historically set the rules that intentionally or unintentionally exclude others from access to wealth and resources.

Origins & Lineage

The foundations of understanding structural inequality can be traced back to the works of classical sociologists such as Karl Marx, Max Weber, and Emile Durkheim. Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Discourse on the Origin and Basis of Inequality Among Men, a 1755 treatise on the topic of social inequality and its origins, was written in 1754 as Rousseau’s entry in a competition by the Academy of Dijon, and was published in 1755. He concluded that private property is the original source and basis of all inequality.

Weber expanded on Marx’s ideas by introducing the concept of “life chances” and emphasizing the role of status and power alongside economic class. He argued that social stratification results from a combination of class, status, and party affiliations, each contributing to an individual’s life chances and experiences of inequality. Durkheim focused on the role of social institutions and the division of labor in creating social cohesion or anomie, thereby influencing structural inequalities.

In the 20th century, the concept of structural inequality was further developed through various sociological theories. Critical theories, including feminist theory, critical race theory, and intersectionality, have been instrumental in highlighting how different forms of inequality (e.g., based on gender, race, and class) intersect and reinforce each other. Scholars such as Patricia Hill Collins and Kimberlé Crenshaw have emphasized the importance of examining how multiple identities and social positions interact to produce unique experiences of oppression and privilege.

The persistence of structural inequality is often rooted in historical legacies of oppression, discrimination, and the unequal distribution of power and resources. The global history of slavery, serfdom, indentured servitude and other forms of coerced cultural or government mandated labour or economic exploitation that marginalizes individuals and the subsequent suppression of human rights are key factors defining structural inequality.

How It’s Practiced

Structural inequality is not a practice but a condition to be recognized and addressed. In conscious and spiritual communities, engagement with structural inequality involves developing what practitioners call “raised consciousness” or critical awareness of systemic patterns. This means performing all one’s roles with a raised consciousness.

Education to raise consciousness shines a light on the structures that keep the oppressed in their subordinated places. Then, with the powerless gaining greater awareness of their conditions, their newly refined reason and stores of knowledge could be used to develop their own political consciousness for taking action to break the shackles of their oppression and improve their well-being.

Spirituality encourages honoring the diversity of human experiences and acknowledging the interconnected nature of our struggles. It invites us to listen to marginalized voices and create spaces for their stories to be heard. By centering the experiences of those who have been silenced, we can work towards dismantling the structures that perpetuate inequality. Spirituality, whether secular or non-secular, roots anti-racism in hope, self-awareness, and sacred community, while social justice work activates and focuses spiritual practice on tangible injustices.

Structural Inequality Today

Contemporary seekers encounter structural inequality through multiple channels. Spirituality is influencing contemporary social and political issues, such as climate change, social justice, and inequality. Programs combining contemplative practice with social analysis have emerged, such as courses examining antiracism and social justice as spiritual practices.

A radical imagination is one that sees society’s problems, and the power that impacts our lives, as deeply rooted in systemic and structural inequalities and forms of exploitation. We are each responsible for structural injustice through and in virtue of our social roles, i.e. our roles as parents, colleagues, employers, citizens, etc., because roles are the site where structure meets agency.

In workshops, retreats, and activist spaces, participants learn to distinguish between individual prejudice and institutional patterns. Theories of social stratification, such as conflict theory and critical theory, provide frameworks for understanding the origins, mechanisms, and perpetuation of structural inequality within society. The focus shifts from personal transformation alone to examining how systems themselves create and maintain disparities.

Common Misconceptions

Structural inequality is frequently conflated with individual bias or personal prejudice. Structural inequality differs from individual forms of inequality. That’s where racism and sexism are exhibited by individual behavior. Many people think that all inequality is due to personal biases that can be overcome individually. They believe that inequality would disappear if people “just stood up for themselves,” or if others stopped oppressing them. This misunderstanding obscures the need for systemic change.

Another misconception is that structural inequality is identical to “systemic” or “institutional” inequality. Systemic inequality is interchangeably used with the term structural inequality (or institutional inequality), which refers to the same type of institutionalized discrimination. While these terms overlap significantly, some scholars reserve “structural” for patterns that accumulate across multiple institutions over time.

Structural inequality is not a return to natural human hierarchies. Natural differences are not a sufficient explanation for social hierarchies. The inequalities we observe in societies are manufactured through institutional arrangements, not inevitable expressions of human nature.

Finally, addressing structural inequality does not require abandoning spiritual practice for political activism. Spirituality empowers us to engage in activism that is rooted in love, compassion, and respect. It reminds us that our fight for justice should be guided by principles of non-violence and understanding.

How to Begin

For those seeking to understand structural inequality, begin with Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Discourse on the Origin of Inequality (1755), which established foundational thinking about how societies create rather than simply reflect disparities. Contemporary readers benefit from Patricia Hill Collins’ work on intersectionality, which examines how multiple forms of structural inequality interact.

Practical engagement might include joining study circles that combine social analysis with contemplative practice, participating in programs like those offered through centers focused on sacred activism, or working with organizations that examine institutional patterns rather than only individual behaviors. Addressing structural inequality requires a comprehensive, multi-faceted approach that targets the underlying systemic and institutional barriers that create and sustain these inequities.

Begin by examining your own social roles and the institutions you participate in. Addressing structural injustice requires taking on role-ideals that challenge unjust structures in order to push the boundaries of one’s role in the right direction. Read widely across sociology, critical theory, and spiritual traditions that connect inner work with systemic awareness. Seek out teachers and communities explicitly bridging contemplative practice with structural analysis rather than focusing exclusively on personal transformation.

Related terms

systemic oppressionintersectionalitysocial justicecritical consciousnesssacred activismliberation theology
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