Most of the existing social science literature understands inequality and stratifi cation primarily as processes that occur within national boundaries. Such a focus has produced a number of infl uential overarching narratives. One such narrative is that people’s relative well-being is shaped most fundamentally by the capacity of homegrown institutions to promote economic growth and/or equity. Another, that people over time have become more stratifi ed by their relative achievement and effort rather than by the characteristics with which they are born. A third one, a corollary of the other two, is that contemporary upward social mobility is fundamentally the outcome of the adoption of better domestic institutions by countries, and/or the acq...
During the last one‐and‐a‐half centuries, average world income grew 10‐fold, the composition of out...
This paper provides a long-run view of well-being inequality at world scale based on a new historica...
Globalisation is affecting daily life almost everywhere, so it seemed logical when the 2005 UN Repor...
Inequality emerged as a social concern during the Enlightenment and was seen as violating the norm o...
It is apparent that not only are there high levels of inequalities within most countries, but those ...
Social inequalities have conventionally been researched as synchronous processes within the frame of...
Inequality has increased in most Western countries since the early 1980s. In a recent report, the in...
Seen in historical perspective the main economic predicaments of the present world (such...
Using social tables, we make an estimate of global inequality (inequality among world citizens) in e...
Global inequality has been little analyzed by sociologists despite their claim to be the scienti?c e...
Seen in historical perspective the main economic issues of the present world (such as poverty, inequ...
This paper reviews five striking facts about inequality across countries. As Kuznets (1955) famously...
Why should social inequality be the topic of a session of a history congress rather than of a meeti...
Three contemporary paradoxes deserve explanations. First, in America, the finance-led growth regime ...
Inequality is unfortunately a phenomenon of great relevance for the contemporary period. The increas...
During the last one‐and‐a‐half centuries, average world income grew 10‐fold, the composition of out...
This paper provides a long-run view of well-being inequality at world scale based on a new historica...
Globalisation is affecting daily life almost everywhere, so it seemed logical when the 2005 UN Repor...
Inequality emerged as a social concern during the Enlightenment and was seen as violating the norm o...
It is apparent that not only are there high levels of inequalities within most countries, but those ...
Social inequalities have conventionally been researched as synchronous processes within the frame of...
Inequality has increased in most Western countries since the early 1980s. In a recent report, the in...
Seen in historical perspective the main economic predicaments of the present world (such...
Using social tables, we make an estimate of global inequality (inequality among world citizens) in e...
Global inequality has been little analyzed by sociologists despite their claim to be the scienti?c e...
Seen in historical perspective the main economic issues of the present world (such as poverty, inequ...
This paper reviews five striking facts about inequality across countries. As Kuznets (1955) famously...
Why should social inequality be the topic of a session of a history congress rather than of a meeti...
Three contemporary paradoxes deserve explanations. First, in America, the finance-led growth regime ...
Inequality is unfortunately a phenomenon of great relevance for the contemporary period. The increas...
During the last one‐and‐a‐half centuries, average world income grew 10‐fold, the composition of out...
This paper provides a long-run view of well-being inequality at world scale based on a new historica...
Globalisation is affecting daily life almost everywhere, so it seemed logical when the 2005 UN Repor...