Political Science, asked by suchitrajagetiya, 9 months ago

how was the untouchability act helped in the reducing inequality in the society​

Answers

Answered by madanmohan10
3

Answer:

it's easy to explain

Explanation:

many were untouchables in our past. after the untouchable act was passed it helped many people gain equality in the society.

they were not considered as untouchables and there were allowed to vivit all places

Answered by umeshabiballenahally
4

Answer:

We need to solidify the dimension along which inequality is being looked at. Untouchability is a social convention at the group level, meaning that it is social inequality. So because it is social inequality, it can't eliminate social inequality.

You may be thinking economic inequality, which it can reduce. If untouchables are relegated to certain business/industrial activities that others are forbidden, they are benefiting, if you will, from a "barrier to entry" in industrial economic terms. This means that the untouchables' jobs must draw from a constrained pool of suppliers. This constraint allows them to collect premium prices over what would happen if the supplier market was completely open to others who might entertain the remote desire to be a mortician or a whatever else is an untouchable profession.

Maybe the idea is that the economic benefit would release the untouchables from the shackles of oppressive social castes by giving them the resources to fight such stereotypic social stratification. It's a nice idea.

In reality, this would only fix economic inequality. In the US, economic and social status is pretty tightly correlated so that the social transcendence dream would make sense. Places like India, there are other considerations that contribute to social status besides .

Explanation:

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