In this article we pursue, using appropriate British birth cohort data, various issues that arise from recent research into the ‘direct’ effect of social origins on individuals’ social mobility chances: i.e. the effect that is not mediated by education and that can be seen as giving rise to non-meritocratic ‘glass floors’ and ‘glass ceilings’. We show that if educational level is determined at labour market entry, class destinations are significantly associated with class origins independently of education. However, we go on to investigate how far the direct effect may be underestimated by an insufficiently comprehensive treatment of social origins, and also how far it may be overestimated by a failure to take into account the effects ...
The controversial issue of 'meritocracy' can be most productively addressed if it is treated as one ...
Research on stratification and mobility has consistently shown that in the UK there is a direct impa...
Using educational status in England from 1170 to 2012, we show that the rate of social mobility in a...
In this paper we pursue, using appropriate British birth-cohort data, various issues that arise from...
Research in social stratification has shown that children from working‐class backgrounds tend to obt...
This paper provides a comprehensive account of the way in which cognitive and educational attainment...
In this paper, we address two research questions on the basis of the series of British birth cohort ...
This article examines the impact of social origin on tertiary graduates’ labour market outcomes in G...
Existing data on social mobility in Britain demonstrate a disparity of up to 4:1 in the relative cha...
We aim to bring together two current strands of research into inequalities in individuals’ education...
This paper explores levels of achievement amongst boys who attended a selective school in Birmingham...
AbstractThe relation between intra-generational social class mobility of parents and their children'...
Education—and in particular higher education—is often regarded as a route to social mobility. For th...
The primary goal of inter-generational mobility (IGM) research has always been to explain how and wh...
Despite predominantly lower social class origins, the second generation of established immigrant gro...
The controversial issue of 'meritocracy' can be most productively addressed if it is treated as one ...
Research on stratification and mobility has consistently shown that in the UK there is a direct impa...
Using educational status in England from 1170 to 2012, we show that the rate of social mobility in a...
In this paper we pursue, using appropriate British birth-cohort data, various issues that arise from...
Research in social stratification has shown that children from working‐class backgrounds tend to obt...
This paper provides a comprehensive account of the way in which cognitive and educational attainment...
In this paper, we address two research questions on the basis of the series of British birth cohort ...
This article examines the impact of social origin on tertiary graduates’ labour market outcomes in G...
Existing data on social mobility in Britain demonstrate a disparity of up to 4:1 in the relative cha...
We aim to bring together two current strands of research into inequalities in individuals’ education...
This paper explores levels of achievement amongst boys who attended a selective school in Birmingham...
AbstractThe relation between intra-generational social class mobility of parents and their children'...
Education—and in particular higher education—is often regarded as a route to social mobility. For th...
The primary goal of inter-generational mobility (IGM) research has always been to explain how and wh...
Despite predominantly lower social class origins, the second generation of established immigrant gro...
The controversial issue of 'meritocracy' can be most productively addressed if it is treated as one ...
Research on stratification and mobility has consistently shown that in the UK there is a direct impa...
Using educational status in England from 1170 to 2012, we show that the rate of social mobility in a...