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Social reproduction and mobility in Britain and Ireland in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries

Social reproduction and mobility in Britain and Ireland in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
Social reproduction and mobility in Britain and Ireland in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries
This article presents some preliminary results from a historical study of social mobility in Britain and Ireland, from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century. The study is marked by a unique combination of features: (1) it follows families for up to five generations, through both maternal and paternal lines; (2) it uses a continuous measure of social position, rather than class categories; (3) this measure is derived from data on social interaction – correspondence analyses of cross-tabulations of the occupations for marriages taking place in the periods 1777–1866 and 1867–1913; (4) each individual's social position is summarised by a work-life trajectory, represented by his social location at ages 20 and 50.
The analyses are based on twelve ten-year birth cohorts from 1790–99 to 1900–09. The results indicate a remarkable degree of stability of social processes of reproduction throughout this period, although there is an extremely slow shift towards a weakening of family influence. This process appears to have accelerated for those born in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, a period of both educational reform and major change in Britain's industrial organisation.
credentialism, industrialisation, occupation, social mobility, social reproduction
0038-0385
265-281
Prandy, Kenneth
2123333c-0c54-4ed1-b058-425160d2a838
Bottero, Wendy
2da4e792-ecef-4406-bba1-913f03dedecd
Prandy, Kenneth
2123333c-0c54-4ed1-b058-425160d2a838
Bottero, Wendy
2da4e792-ecef-4406-bba1-913f03dedecd

Prandy, Kenneth and Bottero, Wendy (2000) Social reproduction and mobility in Britain and Ireland in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Sociology, 34 (2), 265-281. (doi:10.1177/S0038038500000171).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article presents some preliminary results from a historical study of social mobility in Britain and Ireland, from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century. The study is marked by a unique combination of features: (1) it follows families for up to five generations, through both maternal and paternal lines; (2) it uses a continuous measure of social position, rather than class categories; (3) this measure is derived from data on social interaction – correspondence analyses of cross-tabulations of the occupations for marriages taking place in the periods 1777–1866 and 1867–1913; (4) each individual's social position is summarised by a work-life trajectory, represented by his social location at ages 20 and 50.
The analyses are based on twelve ten-year birth cohorts from 1790–99 to 1900–09. The results indicate a remarkable degree of stability of social processes of reproduction throughout this period, although there is an extremely slow shift towards a weakening of family influence. This process appears to have accelerated for those born in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, a period of both educational reform and major change in Britain's industrial organisation.

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Published date: 2000
Keywords: credentialism, industrialisation, occupation, social mobility, social reproduction

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 33812
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/33812
ISSN: 0038-0385
PURE UUID: 7dcc601c-2d0d-4313-b87a-fe3d1522f22b

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Date deposited: 20 Jul 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:45

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Author: Kenneth Prandy
Author: Wendy Bottero

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