Introduction
Social discrimination is the unfair treatment or making a preference in courtesy of or against an individual in the society based on either class or group among others (Hogg, 2016). The society is characterized by differences in terms of wealth and power as well as status. The differences in such status and privileges lead to stratification in the society (Hogg, 2016). The inequality in the society brings uncalled for treatments and thus the discrimination. According to Karl Marx, the society is only composed of two groups of people. These include those who own the means of production and the workers.
Thesis Statement
Increasing the intersociety collaboration and interaction in the modern world will accelerate the end of social discrimination across the society (Hogg, 2016). Because the social stratification is brought by difference in resources, collaboration and sharing of such resources will breach the gaps in the society and thus end the discrimination.
Methodology
Randomized and controlled research method is the lost appropriate method for use in this case. In this method, the class of a person targeted can be manipulated in an equal way as manipulation of the discrimination (treatment) by randomly allocating the experimental participants to being subjected to varying levels of discrimination. In the first experiment, the class of the participants is varied. Through an interview, the experimenter records whether there are different responses under one class treatment in comparison to others. In the second experiment, there is random assignment of participants to different treatments with or with on discrimination. It measures the level of the behavior of the targeted persons.
In conclusion, the unfair treatment of individuals is what amounts to social discrimination in the society. Despite the common agreement by theorists like the Marx and Max, the social discrimination differs significantly in nature.
References
Hogg, M. A. (2016). Social identity theory. In Understanding Peace and Conflict Through Social Identity Theory (pp. 3-17). Springer International Publishing.