This paper examines the processes whereby post-Fordist economic restructuring is widely held to have led to growing social polarisation in the advanced capitalist economies. Conceptual fuzziness has clouded the polarisation hypothesis, and a review of international evidence shows no clear trend towards either occupational or earnings inequality. There is stronger evidence of growing household income inequality, due mainly to changes in household composition and national taxation and social welfare policies. In the case of the Republic of Ireland, there has been a more definite tendency towards occupational, earnings and household income polarisation in the 1990s, giving rise to important policy implications at a time of unprecedent...
In this paper we address the issue of whether the Great Recession in Ireland led to increased social...
In this paper we examine the consequences for social mobility patterns of the unprecedented period o...
In this paper we address the issue of whether the Great Recession in Ireland led to increased social...
This paper examines the processes whereby post-Fordist economic restructuring is widely held to hav...
This paper extends to the year 2002 that section of an earlier paper (Breathnach 2002b) which consi...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
In this paper we address claims that the impact of the Great Recession in Ireland has led to increas...
This commentary examines two principal forms of inequality and their evolution since the 1960s: the...
In this paper we examine the consequences for social mobility patterns of the unprecedented period o...
A striking divergence can be observed in the interpretations that economists and sociologists have o...
Increasing earnings inequality has been an important feature of the US and UK labour markets in rece...
The Irish economy almost doubled in size between 1990 and 2000 in terms of Gross Domestic Product (G...
In this paper we examine the consequences for social mobility patterns of the unprecedented period o...
The sociology of development has been dominated by the controversy about whether foreign penetration...
In this paper we address the issue of whether the Great Recession in Ireland led to increased social...
In this paper we examine the consequences for social mobility patterns of the unprecedented period o...
In this paper we address the issue of whether the Great Recession in Ireland led to increased social...
This paper examines the processes whereby post-Fordist economic restructuring is widely held to hav...
This paper extends to the year 2002 that section of an earlier paper (Breathnach 2002b) which consi...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
The routinisation thesis expects technology to hollow out the middle of the employment structure, le...
In this paper we address claims that the impact of the Great Recession in Ireland has led to increas...
This commentary examines two principal forms of inequality and their evolution since the 1960s: the...
In this paper we examine the consequences for social mobility patterns of the unprecedented period o...
A striking divergence can be observed in the interpretations that economists and sociologists have o...
Increasing earnings inequality has been an important feature of the US and UK labour markets in rece...
The Irish economy almost doubled in size between 1990 and 2000 in terms of Gross Domestic Product (G...
In this paper we examine the consequences for social mobility patterns of the unprecedented period o...
The sociology of development has been dominated by the controversy about whether foreign penetration...
In this paper we address the issue of whether the Great Recession in Ireland led to increased social...
In this paper we examine the consequences for social mobility patterns of the unprecedented period o...
In this paper we address the issue of whether the Great Recession in Ireland led to increased social...