In this paper, evidence from Britain and the United States concerning social polarization is compared. Two major approaches to the subject are identified: the first, most extensively developed in the United States, is focused upon occupational shifts and their impact upon the earnings paid to individuals; and the second, which has emerged in Britain, is focused upon households and all the types of work undertaken within them. These approaches and their differing implications for polarization -- the first approach suggesting a 'disappearing middle' and the second approach a growing 'underclass' -- are related to differing social and economic circumstances in Britain and the United States. Both approaches are applied to a household survey of ...
This paper examines the processes whereby post-Fordist economic restructuring is widely held to hav...
This study explores whether, in societies around the world, affective polarization – or animosity be...
exhibited a pattern of job polarization with rises in employment shares in the highest- and lowest-w...
Abstract This paper studies the contribution of different skill groups to the polarisation of the UK...
This paper shows that the United Kingdom since 1975 has exhibited a pattern of job polarization with...
This paper tackles the issues of social polarization and income polarization in several North Americ...
In recent years, there has been a growing acceptance of two related phenomena: routinisation and pol...
The late 1960s saw the reemergence of concern over the growth of social polarisation in London. Much...
Considerable debate has occurred over whether ‘global cities’ are witnessing polarization of their l...
Recent work has documented a rising degree of wealth inequality in the United States between 1983 an...
JARVIS H. (1997) Housing, labour markets and household structure: questioning the role of secondary ...
The concept of polarization is related to the clustering of individuals forming groups in different ...
This paper extends to the year 2002 that section of an earlier paper (Breathnach 2002b) which consi...
The concept of polarisation, where the extremes of a distribution are growing and where there is a m...
In recent years, there has been a growing acceptance of two related phenomena: routinisation and pol...
This paper examines the processes whereby post-Fordist economic restructuring is widely held to hav...
This study explores whether, in societies around the world, affective polarization – or animosity be...
exhibited a pattern of job polarization with rises in employment shares in the highest- and lowest-w...
Abstract This paper studies the contribution of different skill groups to the polarisation of the UK...
This paper shows that the United Kingdom since 1975 has exhibited a pattern of job polarization with...
This paper tackles the issues of social polarization and income polarization in several North Americ...
In recent years, there has been a growing acceptance of two related phenomena: routinisation and pol...
The late 1960s saw the reemergence of concern over the growth of social polarisation in London. Much...
Considerable debate has occurred over whether ‘global cities’ are witnessing polarization of their l...
Recent work has documented a rising degree of wealth inequality in the United States between 1983 an...
JARVIS H. (1997) Housing, labour markets and household structure: questioning the role of secondary ...
The concept of polarization is related to the clustering of individuals forming groups in different ...
This paper extends to the year 2002 that section of an earlier paper (Breathnach 2002b) which consi...
The concept of polarisation, where the extremes of a distribution are growing and where there is a m...
In recent years, there has been a growing acceptance of two related phenomena: routinisation and pol...
This paper examines the processes whereby post-Fordist economic restructuring is widely held to hav...
This study explores whether, in societies around the world, affective polarization – or animosity be...
exhibited a pattern of job polarization with rises in employment shares in the highest- and lowest-w...