This article explores the concept of social mobility through the lens of my own family history. My parents were baby boomers, beneficiaries of the 1944 Education Act and the opening of new universities in the 1960s. They were helped less by the meritocratic ideal of elite education than by more widely available benefits, such as public libraries, student grants, free time and a sense of not feeling driven into purely pragmatic or short-term choices. I argue that our stories of social mobility should pay more attention to how wider social histories interact with the idiosyncrasy and contingency of individual lives
This paper uses visualisations of life trajectories drawn from the 1958 National Child Development S...
Increasing social mobility is the ‘principal goal’ of the current Coalition Government’s social poli...
The author deals with the phenomenon of individual and social contexts of downward social mobility. ...
This paper highlights the potential of taking a genealogical approach to researching social mobility...
While the pattern of social mobility in postwar Britain has been extensively studied, revealing cons...
The article places the issue of Social Mobility at the heart of the debate about education. The sugg...
As there have been few studies of individual social mobility in Britain, this thesis examines a wide...
Social mobility is the movement in time of individuals, families or other social units between posit...
Greater levels of social mobility are widely seen as desirable on grounds of both equity and effici...
Mobility is one of the most important constituents of everyday life, yet it is rarely studied histor...
This thesis is a comparative study of social mobility, describing and explaining the movement of ind...
Existing histories of social mobility have focused on adults and on measuring the achievement of ind...
What difference did increasing spatial mobility make to British society between the 1950s and the 19...
This volume examines the role of education in shaping rates and patterns of intergenerational social...
The impact of participation in tertiary-level education on the movement of individuals up or down th...
This paper uses visualisations of life trajectories drawn from the 1958 National Child Development S...
Increasing social mobility is the ‘principal goal’ of the current Coalition Government’s social poli...
The author deals with the phenomenon of individual and social contexts of downward social mobility. ...
This paper highlights the potential of taking a genealogical approach to researching social mobility...
While the pattern of social mobility in postwar Britain has been extensively studied, revealing cons...
The article places the issue of Social Mobility at the heart of the debate about education. The sugg...
As there have been few studies of individual social mobility in Britain, this thesis examines a wide...
Social mobility is the movement in time of individuals, families or other social units between posit...
Greater levels of social mobility are widely seen as desirable on grounds of both equity and effici...
Mobility is one of the most important constituents of everyday life, yet it is rarely studied histor...
This thesis is a comparative study of social mobility, describing and explaining the movement of ind...
Existing histories of social mobility have focused on adults and on measuring the achievement of ind...
What difference did increasing spatial mobility make to British society between the 1950s and the 19...
This volume examines the role of education in shaping rates and patterns of intergenerational social...
The impact of participation in tertiary-level education on the movement of individuals up or down th...
This paper uses visualisations of life trajectories drawn from the 1958 National Child Development S...
Increasing social mobility is the ‘principal goal’ of the current Coalition Government’s social poli...
The author deals with the phenomenon of individual and social contexts of downward social mobility. ...