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2. Economic Restructuring and Intra-Generational Class Mobility in Mexico
- Author
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Parrado, Emilio A.
- Abstract
This paper compares men's career opportunities and intra-generational class mobility across periods with markedly different development strategies in Mexico. Despite its significance for social stratification and inequality in Mexico, research on mobility has been relatively scant in recent decades. Using data from the National Retrospective Demographic Survey, my analysis connects development strategies to individual career opportunities by comparing intra-generational class mobility across three cohorts of Mexican men. Results show that occupational opportunities failed to keep pace with rising human capital in Mexico under the neoliberal regime. Instead, entry and mobility into good jobs became more difficult to achieve and downward mobility more prevalent even among highly educated workers.
- Published
- 2005
3. Moving On? A Growth-Curve Analysis of Occupational Attainment and Career Progression Patterns in West Germany.
- Author
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Manzoni, Anna, Härkönen, Juho, and Mayer, Karl Ulrich
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL structure ,CAREER development ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,LABOR market -- Social aspects ,EQUALITY & society ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,GROWTH curves (Statistics) ,COHORT analysis ,SOCIAL conditions in Germany - Abstract
In this paper, we use multilevel growth-curve analysis to model occupational stratification across West German careers for cohorts born between 1919 and 1971. We argue that a life-course approach gives a more appropriate perspective into social stratification by focusing on the permanence of inequalities across human lives. With data from the German Life History Study (GLHS), our primary interest is in the amount and timing of career progression and the ways in which educational attainment, class background, and cohort context shape them. We confirm previous findings of limited career progression and permanence in occupational inequality. Thus, career mobility can correct for initial disadvantages only to a limited degree. We also confirm the strong role played by the standardized and stratified German educational system, which channels workers into specific occupations with strict boundaries. We find a substantial gross effect of class background, which is strongly mediated by educational attainment for women but not for men. We do not find any general indications of a trend in change across cohorts, although there are some weak indications that men who entered the labor market in the problematic 1970s had weaker career growth. We conclude by discussing the advantages of a life-course approach to occupational stratification and the possibilities of growth-curve analysis to answer pertinent questions in research on careers and occupational mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Immigrant-Biased Technological Change: The Effect of New Technology Implementation on Native and Non-Western Immigrant Employment in the Netherlands.
- Author
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Berge, Jannes ten and Tomaskovic-Devey, Donald
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,LABOR turnover ,JOB satisfaction ,EMPLOYMENT ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility - Abstract
This study examines how workplace technological innovation is associated with individual-level employment turnover. We advance the literature by studying how the impact of technology differs for Dutch native workers and workers with non-Western immigrant backgrounds. Furthermore, we examine the disparate impacts of organizational context, as indexed by the proportion of workers with non-Western immigrant backgrounds and workplace job volatility, as well as industry-level unionization. Using large-scale Dutch matched employer–employee longitudinal data for the period 2001–2014, we find technology implementation to decrease chances of job ending, but this innovation protection is smaller and sometimes absent for workers with non-Western immigrant backgrounds than for native Dutch workers. This pattern is most marked for first-generation immigrants and immigrants from non-Dutch-speaking countries. We also find evidence of organization-level ethnic competition effects among low and middle educated workers, but not for workers with tertiary degrees. Among lower educated workers technological displacement is exaggerated in workplaces that employ many workers with immigrant backgrounds, although unionization mutes this effect. Among middle educated workers technological displacement is exaggerated in high-turnover workplaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. How Internal Hiring Affects Occupational Stratification.
- Author
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Wilmers, Nathan and Kimball, William
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL structure ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,EMPLOYMENT practices ,CAREER changes ,LABOR market ,INDUSTRIAL relations - Abstract
When employers conduct more internal hiring, does this facilitate upward mobility for low-paid workers or does it protect the already advantaged? To assess the effect of within-employer job mobility on occupational stratification, we develop a framework that accounts for inequality in both rates and payoffs of job changing. Internal hiring facilitates advancement for workers without strong credentials, but it excludes workers at employers with few good jobs to advance into. Analyzing Current Population Survey data, we find that when internal hiring increases in a local labor market, it facilitates upward mobility less than when external hiring increases. When workers in low-paid occupations switch jobs, they benefit more from switching employers than from moving jobs within the same employer. One-third of this difference is due to low-paid workers isolated in industries with few high-paying jobs to transfer into. An occupationally segregated labor market therefore limits the benefits that internal hiring can bring to the workers who most need upward mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Unequal Ties: Immigrants' Initial Social Capital and Labor Market Stratification.
- Author
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Park, Sung S, Lai, Tianjian, and Waldinger, Roger D
- Subjects
SOCIAL capital ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,LABOR market ,LABOR market segmentation ,OCCUPATIONAL structure ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility - Abstract
Social capital (SC) plays a fundamental role in immigration by easing entry into a new environment. We advance a novel approach to assessing the role of SC for immigrants' labor market incorporation. First, we isolate the impact of SC activation from the mere presence of potential help. Second, we disentangle the diverse components of migration-related SC by distinguishing between individual migration- (IM) and community migration-level (CM) connections in the country of destination. Third, we trace the roles of IM SC and CM SC across multiple labor market outcomes, ranging from the search to secure the first job to the quality of the first job to longer-term occupational mobility. Absent activation, IM SC has virtually no impact on any of the outcomes. Rather, migrants' IM SC yield their fundamental impact when activated, contributing to a successful job search while steering them into first jobs that are of lower-quality relative to their pre-migration occupation. By contrast, CM SC facilitates the initial job search and filters immigrants into higher-quality first jobs. Moreover, immigrants who arrive when CM SC is at its most mature stage reap the clearest benefits in improving their occupational status. These findings underscore the importance of both early settlement IM SC and CM SC in the processes of immigrants' labor market stratification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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7. Intergenerational Occupational Mobility in the Late 19th Century United States.
- Author
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Guest, Avery M., Landale, Nancy S., and McCann, James C.
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL surveys , *WHITE people , *OCCUPATIONAL mobility , *UPWARD mobility (Social sciences) , *SOCIAL status - Abstract
Abstract Focusing on white U.S. men aged 25-34, this paper compares the patterns of intergenerational occupational mobility in a late 19th century sample to those found in the well-known 1962 and 1973 surveys of Occupational Change in a Generation (OCGI and OCGII). While the overall pattern of mobility indicates less upward mobility and greater occupational inheritance among the 19th century men, the differences are small when comparisons are restricted to the nonfarm sector. Results from association models indicate a stronger relationship between origins and destinations in 1962 than in the late 1800s. In contrast, the 1973 OCGII data shows a virtually identical relationship between origins and destinations to that found in our 19th century sample. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
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8. Career Processes in Great Britain and the United States.
- Author
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Winfield, Idee, Campbell, Richard T., Kerckhoff, Alan C., Everett, Diane D., and Trott, Jerry M.
- Subjects
- *
OCCUPATIONAL mobility , *CAREER changes , *SOCIAL mobility , *LABOR market - Abstract
Abstract Previous research suggests that British and American systems of social mobility are organized around different traditions and principles that produce similar mobility outcomes. In this paper we explore the implications of Turner' s distinction between sponsored and contest educational systems for the process of occupational career mobility in Great Britain and the United States. We use data on matched labor market cohorts from the Occupational Changes in a Generation Survey Il and the Oxford Social Mobility Study to examine the linkage between the education system and the occupational structure in the two countries, as well as the role of "further education" in the career process of British men. The results indicate that despite substantial differences in the way in which education and occupational credentials are obtained, the degree of openness in the two societies is about the same when one looks at occupational status ten and twenty years after labor force entry. We find, however, a notable degree of difference between the two societies in the process of career mobility. The results suggest that "sponsored" and "contest" are oversimplified labels for the differences in the career processes of British and American men. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
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9. Industrial Transformation and Occupational Change in the U.S., 1960-70.
- Author
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Singelmann, Joachim and Browning, Harley L.
- Subjects
SOCIAL scientists ,BEHAVIORAL scientists ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,LABOR turnover ,SOCIAL mobility ,CAREER changes - Abstract
ABSTRACT Increasingly, sociologists concerned with occupational mobility and the changes in the occupational distribution are turning their attention to the structural conditions for such changes. One important change has been industry shifts, particularly the decline of agriculture and the growth of services. In this paper we argue that industry shifts have an important effect on changes in the occupational structure. Using a shift-share approach, changes in the occupational structure of the U.S. between 1960 and 1970 are decomposed into an industry shift effect, an occupational composition effect, and an interaction effect. These effects vary for major occupational categories, but for total U.S. employment the industry shift effect accounted for about two-thirds of the change in occupational structure, the composition effect for one-third, and the interaction effect was negligible. It is not likely that there will be as important shifts in the industry structure during the next 30 years as in the last 30 years. But it has been the industry shifts that have mostly contributed to an expansion of the higher status occupations, particularly professionals and managers. Therefore, unless the occupational composition changes in such a way as to compensate for the diminishing effects of the industry structure, structural opportunities will either remain at current levels or even decline in the years to come. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
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10. The Importance of Mother: Labor Force Participation and Intergenerational Mobility of Women.
- Author
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Stevens, Gillian and Boyd, Monica
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,LABOR turnover ,CAREER changes ,HOME economics ,LABOR ,SOCIAL mobility - Abstract
ABSTRACT Previous research concerning the linkages between women's occupational origins and destinations has applied models developed for the study of men's intergenerational occupational mobility. In this paper, we use an approach that incorporates two unique aspects of women's occupational experiences. First, we consider housework to be a possible occupational outcome for women. Second, we consider the occupations of mothers as well as those of fathers in the portrayal of women's occupational origins. We show that this approach more fully displays the influences of occupational origins on women's subsequent occupational activities. In particular, we find that women whose mothers worked are themselves more likely to join the labor force, and their occupations are likely to resemble their mother's. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
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11. Small Entrepreneurship in a Developing Society: Patterns of Labor Absorption and Social Mobility.
- Author
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Koo, Hagen
- Subjects
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,DEVELOPING countries ,LABOR supply ,SOCIAL mobility ,OCCUPATIONS ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility - Abstract
ABSTRACT Observing a plethora of small entrepreneurial activities in the cities of developing countries, this paper examines the social significance of these occupational activities. The data gathered from a Korean city suggest that small entrepreneurship provides occupational niches to marginal migrant workers as well as an alternative to the bureaucratic channel of upward social mobility for a significant proportion of urban residents. These findings are interpreted by using the conception of occupational situs, which promises greater analytical utility in the study of developing societies than the unidimensional conception of occupational structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
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12. Occupational Mobility in Nineteenth-Century U.S. Cities: A Review of Some Evidence.
- Author
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Hazelrigg, Lawrence E.
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,INTERNAL migration ,SOCIAL mobility ,CAREER changes ,OCCUPATIONS - Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper reviews evidence concerning intracity trends in occupational status change among adult males from four studies of three cities--Boston, Philadelphia, and Poughkeepsie, New York for the mid-nineteenth century. The quality of the data and problems of cross-study comparability are discussed. Secondary analyses of the data indicate that rates of grossly defined vertical mobility and the transmission of status through adults' careers were stable among the nonmigrant male populations of the three cities for the periods of time in question. Data available for Boston indicate that the level of son's career beginnings had a substantial impact on his subsequent attainments and that the effect of father's occupation was largely interpreted by son's career-entry level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
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13. The Logic of Opportunity and Mobility.
- Author
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Skvoretz, John
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,PERSONS ,CAREER development ,THEORY of knowledge ,OCCUPATIONS ,INTERNAL migration - Abstract
Abstract This paper clarifies the relationship between opportunity and mobility: first, by analyzing the ways opportunity differentials are created into three generic possibilities--through positional, historical, and resource variation; and, second, by uncovering certain logical relations that exist between opportunity differentials and differences in the amount of career mobility individuals experience. The first point offers a useful classification for ordering and comparing diverse theoretical approaches to career mobility. The basic conclusion of the second point is that all differences in career mobility between groups of individuals are logically explained by differences in the opportunities to move to which they are exposed and, further, all differences in the career mobility of individuals are due to chance variation within the constraints of the logically true aggregate relationships. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Structural Change and Class Mobility in Capitalist Societies.
- Author
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Robinson, Robert V.
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,CAPITALIST societies ,SOCIAL classes ,CAPITALISM ,SELF-employment ,SOCIAL structure ,INVESTORS - Abstract
Abstract Focusing on occupational change and mobility, current research on stratification has largely ignored some processes of structural change and mobility that are central to classical and contemporary class theories. In this paper, class mobility is assumed to depend in part on four structural changes in the organization of production: (1) a shift from agricultural to industrial forms of production; (2) a decline in self-employment and personal or family ownership of farms and businesses; (3) an expansion of the industrial working class; and (4) an expansion of the industrial manager class location. Analysis of class mobility in six capitalist societies (the United States, Great Britain, Northern Ireland, Argentina, Chile, and Bolivia) reveals that the sizeable differences among them in total class mobility can be explained largely by differences in the structure of classes. Apart from these structural differences, the societies shared essentially the same class mobility regime--one characterized by considerable rigidity of class boundaries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. OCCUPATIONAL STEREOTYPES AND PRESTIGE.
- Author
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Thielbar, Gerald and Feldman, Saul D.
- Subjects
STEREOTYPES ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SOCIAL status ,SOCIAL stratification ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility - Abstract
This paper examines occupational evaluation, as a behavioral process. First, alternative methods of investigating- occupational stratification are distinguished: the socioeconomic or "objective" approach, the prestige assessment or "subjective" approach, and a "linkage model" that attempts to identify objective characteristics that enter as status-conferring criteria into prestige assessment. The third approach assumes a weighting and combining process according to which prestige assessments are concluded de novo by each person who reviews the occupational structure. Taking account of occupational characteristics may, however, involve response to stereotyped imagery as to what occupations and their incumbents are like, as well as the processing of objective data. Popular stereotypes of occupations are explored through the use of the semantic differential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Rejoinder to Richard Clayton.
- Author
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Bruce, J. M.
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,SOCIAL psychology ,METROPOLITAN areas ,CAREER changes ,SOCIAL mobility - Abstract
This article presents the author's reply to Richard Clayton on his view regarding the author's paper "Intragenerational Occupational Mobility and Visiting With Kin and Friend." The author states that it is irritating to find insufficient information in a research paper on which a judgment as to the adequacy of the analysis presented can be based. Although certain data are often so clearly necessary that little debate is possible, the amount of detail needed may often be a matter of debate. The information in question was included in the longer original version of the paper, but as there was a need to shorten the paper for publication in this journal the more detailed presentation of the data was summarized. The main purpose of the original analysis of the data (portions of which are reanalyzed by Clayton) was to explore a few ideas about the consequences of mobility for participation in interpersonal relationships. The interpretation and explanation diverges from the one described above in regards to the exact effect one's position in the status structure has on the relationship between mobility and visiting with siblings.
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
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17. Job Mobility among Unauthorized Immigrant Workers.
- Author
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Hall, Matthew, Greenman, Emily, and Yi, Youngmin
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,MEXICAN foreign workers ,IMMIGRATION status ,CENTRAL American foreign workers ,EMPLOYMENT of undocumented immigrants ,LEGAL status of foreign workers ,LABOR turnover research ,SOCIAL isolation - Abstract
This study evaluates how authorization status shapes job transitions among Mexican and Central American immigrants in the United States. Specifically, using data from the Survey of Income and Program Participation, we impute legal status and track employment histories for authorized and unauthorized workers, as well as native-born counterparts, in the less skilled labor market. We distinguish job moves based on changes in occupations and employers; and by linking workers' jobs to expected wages in their occupations, we are able to determine whether job transitions result in occupational upgrades or downgrades. Results reveal that unauthorized immigrants have lower adjusted rates of job mobility, consistent with arguments that their lack of work authorization "traps" their employment. Moreover, when unauthorized migrants do change jobs, their transitions are characterized by a process of occupational churning in which they cycle between similarly positioned jobs and have low rates of upward mobility, both within and across firms. We also test the possibility that the wage returns to job mobility are conditioned by legal status. Finally, we find that the penalties to job mobility associated with unauthorized status are more severe for women than men, potentially because of their high levels of segregation in socially isolating jobs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Status and Career Mobility in Organizational Fields: Chefs and Restaurants in the United States, 1990–2013.
- Subjects
LABOR mobility ,COOKS ,RESTAURANTS ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige ,FOOD service employees ,CAREER development ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility - Abstract
Using a set of user-generated data, we examine patterns in the careers of professional chefs. We argue that this is one of many cases in which careers must be understood as shaped by dual structures—the typical occupational structure within a firm, and the organization of firms in a larger field. We then demonstrate how career trajectories may be formalized as movement through a two-dimensional space defined by status in these structures. Building on previous ethnographic work finding that chefs understand the logic of their careers as involving repeated trade-offs between their occupational status (their rank within the kitchen) and organizational status (the status of the restaurant at which they work), we attempt to determine how different trajectories are associated with different outcomes. We find that, despite the somewhat random nature of entrance into the culinary profession, future top-tier chefs disproportionately begin their careers at high-status restaurants. Beyond their auspicious beginnings, these top-chefs-to-be also commonly devote their early careers to maximizing organizational status, forgoing promotions to higher kitchen ranks in favor of low-level jobs at more prestigious restaurants. By comparison, chefs destined to run lower-status restaurants tend to spend their early careers prioritizing rapid advancement within the kitchen, only pursuing jobs at more prestigious restaurants much later in their careers, with limited success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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19. Occupational and Regional Mobility as Substitutes: A New Approach to Understanding Job Changes and Wage Inequality.
- Author
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Reichelt, Malte and Abraham, Martin
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,WAGES ,LABOR market ,COMPETING risks ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
Job mobility offers opportunities for workers to obtain wage increases, but the returns on job changes differ considerably. We argue that part of this inequality results from a trade-off between occupational and regional mobility. Both mobility types offer alternative strategies for improving one's labor market position; however, each type also has unique restrictions. The high costs of regional mobility can thus induce occupational changes, even though the resulting human-capital devaluation leads to lower wage increases. We use linked retrospective life-course data for Germany (ALWA-ADIAB) and apply competing risks models to show that restrictions on one type of mobility drive individuals toward the other type of mobility. Using fixed-effects regressions, we then show that regional mobility yields higher wage improvements than occupational mobility does. We argue that restrictions on both types of mobility thus not only determine which type of mobility is chosen, thereby helping explain differential careers, but also contribute to inequality in wage trajectories due to differential returns on job mobility. The trade-off has explanatory power for the inequality between certain actors with different sets of mobility restrictions, such as parents and non-parents or employees in jobs with different skill demands, and it may also contribute to our better understanding of broader patterns of inequality—for instance, that caused by between-nation differences in job mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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20. How Does Job Mobility Affect Inequality? Evidence from the South Korean Economic Crisis.
- Author
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Seongsoo Choi
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,EQUALITY ,FINANCIAL crises ,ECONOMIC conditions in South Korea ,LABOR supply ,LABOR market - Abstract
Previous research suggests that increasing job mobility leads to increasing economic inequality. In this study, I argue that an increase in job mobility can be inequality reducing, depending on the macro-structural context in which job changes become more frequent. I demonstrate empirical evidence by applying a new analytical approach to data from the South Korean economic crisis of the late 1990s. I find that rates of job transitions increased significantly during and after the economic crisis, and that more frequent movements between jobs ameliorated the rising trend in inequality: in other words, inequality in occupational status after the crisis would have been even greater had it not been for changes in the pattern of transitions between jobs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. What's So Special about STEM? A Comparison of Women's Retention in STEM and Professional Occupations.
- Author
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Glass, Jennifer L., Sassler, Sharon, Levitte, Yael, and Michelmore, Katherine M.
- Subjects
STEM education ,WOMEN in science ,WOMEN in technology ,WOMEN in engineering ,WOMEN in mathematics ,WOMEN'S employment ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,CAREER changes - Abstract
We follow female college graduates in the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 and compare the trajectories of women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM)-related occupations to other professional occupations. Results show that women in STEM occupations are significantly more likely to leave their occupational field than professional women, especially early in their career, while few women in either group leave jobs to exit the labor force. Family factors cannot account for the differential loss of STEM workers compared to other professional workers. Few differences in job characteristics emerge either, so these cannot account for the disproportionate loss of STEM workers. What does emerge is that investments and job rewards that generally stimulate field commitment, such as advanced training and high job satisfaction, fail to build commitment among women in STEM. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Gender, Bilingualism, and the Early Occupational Careers of Second-Generation Mexicans in the South.
- Author
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Hernández-León, Rubén and Lakhani, Sarah Morando
- Subjects
RUG & carpet industry ,BILINGUALISM -- Social aspects ,CHILDREN of immigrants ,BILINGUALISM ,GENDER & society ,MEXICAN Americans ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,TWENTY-first century ,EMPLOYMENT ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
Following two decades of Mexican migration to the southern United States, the second generation is entering the labor market. We analyze the early occupational careers of fifty-eight second-generation young adults in Dalton, Georgia, a global carpet-manufacturing center. We find intergenerational occupational mobility, with children of Mexican immigrants deploying human-capital skills to access better jobs than their parents. However, the Mexican second generation faces opportunity ladders structured along gender lines, with women working in services and men laboring as bilingual supervisors and crew leaders in the carpet industry. While bilingual skills play a critical role in the employment paths that members of the second generation have started to chart, their use of bilingualism is also shaped by gender dynamics in the workplace. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Up the Down Staircase: Women's Upward Mobility and the Wage Penalty for Occupational Feminization, 1970-2007.
- Author
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Mandel, Hadas
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,INCOME inequality ,FEMININITY -- Social aspects ,WOMEN employees ,SEX discrimination ,WORK environment ,HISTORY ,SOCIAL history - Abstract
This study examines the long-term trends of two parallel and related gender effects, in light of the hypothesis that highly rewarded occupations will be the most penalized by the process of feminization. Using multilevel models of the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series data from 1970 to 2007, the study analyzes trends in women's occupational mobility and juxtaposes these trends with trends in the effects of feminization on occupational pay across diverse occupational wage groups. The findings reveal two opposing processes of gender (in)equality: during this period, many women had impressive success in entering highly rewarded occupations. Simultaneously, however, the negative effect of feminization on the pay levels of these occupations intensified, particularly in high-paid and male-typed occupations. Consequently, women found themselves moving “up the down staircase.” The findings confirm the dynamic nature of gender discrimination and have broad implications for our understanding of the devaluation and exclusion mechanisms discussed in earlier literature. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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24. Gender and Job Mobility in Postsocialist China: A Longitudinal Study of Job Changes in Six Coastal Cities.
- Author
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Yang Cao and Chiung-Yin Hu
- Subjects
GENDER differences (Psychology) ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,SOCIAL conditions in China ,CAREER development -- Social aspects ,EMPLOYMENT of married women ,WOMEN'S rights ,LABOR market ,GENDER role - Abstract
This study examines the gender differences in job mobility in urban China. Conceptualizing China's postsocialist transition as a multi-faceted process, we argue that the emergence of labor markets, gendered role differentiation within the family, and the state's declining involvement in promoting women's rights lead to widened gender gaps in job mobility. Event history analysis of data from six coastal cities finds that married women are less likely than their male counterparts to change jobs for career advancements, but are more likely to experience family-oriented job changes and involuntary terminations. The gender gaps in career-oriented job changes and involuntary terminations have also widened considerably during the reform period. We interpret these findings as the joint results of economic, socio-cultural and political processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Is Occupational Mobility Declining in the U.S.?
- Author
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Rytina, Steven
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,SOCIAL surveys ,EDUCATION ,SOCIAL mobility ,SOCIAL science research - Abstract
Occupational mobility trend is compared using SSIC versus Prestige and SEI scales. A preliminary survey of what occupational scales measure leads to a contrast between older, normative stoles and a norm-independent conception of occupational dominance. Dominance ma), be assessed by three convergent algorithms that assess relative rank by taking averages over origins and destinations. These are shown, to a good approximation, to be averages over advantage, no matter how advantage is indexed. Data from the OCGII and subsequent NORC General Social Survey are analyzed. The dominance results replicate as consistent contrasts with SEI. Trend is summarized as non-decreasing and quite possibly increasing intergenerational rigidity. Tentative evidence of big shake-up after 1986 is presented. The declining role of education in access to rank and as mediator of ascription is described. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Occupational Segregation and the Career Mobility of White Men and Women.
- Author
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Maume Jr., David J.
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,OCCUPATIONAL segregation ,WAGES ,WHITE men ,WHITE women ,AGE ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Much research has examined the impact of occupational segregation on the gender gap in wages. This research clearly implies that men and women are sorted into dissimilar career tracks. Unfortunately, the few studies on the career impacts of occupational segregation are inconclusive because of reliance on anecdotal evidence, research done in a single firm or in the public sector, and problems in measuring career mobility. Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), two employment transitions of prime age white workers were examined: upward wage mobility and transitions into joblessness. Information on the percentage of males working in the respondent's occupation was merged into the PSID. In the presence of controls, percentage of males in the occupation was positively related to men's chances of receiving a wage promotion. For women, occupational segregation positively influenced movement to joblessness The results support the notion that women in male-dominated occupations do not move up the career hidden but rather are pressured to move out of these positions. The article concludes with a call for additional research on the relationship between gender dynamics in the work setting and individual career paths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Guanxi Networks and Job Mobility in China and Singapore.
- Author
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Bian, Yanjie and Ang, Soon
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,CAPITALISM ,LABOR market ,EMPLOYMENT - Abstract
The article focuses on guanxi networks of exchange and job mobility in China and Singapore. It provides a comparative analysis of the relative efficacy of strong and weak contact ties in job mobility in two fast growing East Asian economies, China and Singapore. Because market economies are imperfect in circulating labor market information through formal means, researchers have looked at contact networks as an informal information channel through which persons are matched to jobs. In China, where jobs were assigned by state authority before the emergence of labor markets in the early 1990s, job seekers who had close relationships with job-assigning authority at higher levels tended to obtain, better jobs. When these relationships were weak or nonexistent, job seekers would approach authority indirectly through their relatives or friends who were in close contact with those in charge. Studies of other East Asian countries or areas have also indicated similar tendencies about the importance of strong relative to weak ties in labor markets. Chinese society has long been known for its emphasis on guanxi as a guiding principle of economic and social organization.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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28. White Ethnic Neighborhoods and Assimilation: The Greater New York Region, 1980-1990.
- Author
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Alba, Richard D., Logan, John R., and Crowder, Kyle
- Subjects
ETHNIC neighborhoods ,ASSIMILATION (Sociology) ,ETHNICITY ,SOCIAL mobility ,SOCIAL groups ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility - Abstract
The article examines the role of the white ethnic neighborhood for assimilation versus the persistence of ethnicity. It employs a geographic mapping strategy to identify ethnic neighborhoods as clusters of proximate census tracts where a particular group has a disproportionate share of the population. The white ethnic neighborhood is viewed with uncertainty by sociologists. In contemporary research on ethnic segregation, the assimilation perspective is represented by the theory of spatial assimilation. Its basic tenet is that residential mobility follows from social mobility and acculturation. As members of minority groups establish themselves in American labor markets and acquire the cultural skills to function outside of ethnic enclaves, they leave behind less successful members of their groups and convert socioeconomic and assimilation progress into residential game. An alternative view is that ethnic neighborhoods can survive despite the socioeconomic mobility of group members. The article examines these opposing perspectives by investigating white ethnic neighborhoods in the Greater New York metropolitan region in the period from 1980 to 1990.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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29. Labor Market Structures in Japan: An Analysis of Organizational and Occupational Mobility Patterns.
- Author
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Mariah Mantsun Cheng and Kalleberg, Arne L.
- Subjects
LABOR market ,LABOR mobility ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,LABOR ,INTERNAL migration - Abstract
In this article, we examine patterns of occupational and organizational mobility among Japanese men. Contrary to conventional wisdom, we find that Japanese men often change employers as well as occupations during their careers. Using a conceptualization of internal labor markets that distinguishes between firm internal labor markets (FILMs) and occupational internal labor markets (OILMs), we tested various hypotheses about the determinants of four patterns of job shifts formed by cross-classifying firm and occupational mobility. Our results suggest that men in larger organizations (who we assumed are more apt to be in FILMs) are more likely than those in smaller firms to experience within-firm, mobility, while men in tiny firms make more across-firm shifts. In addition, men in professional and technical occupations (who we assume are more likely to be in OILMs) experience more within-occupation mobility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Facial Dominance of West Point Cadets as a Predictor of Later Military Rank.
- Author
-
Mueller, Ulrich and Mazur, Allan
- Subjects
MILITARY cadets ,PHOTOGRAPHS ,FACIAL expression ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,GRADUATION (Education) ,STATUS attainment ,MILITARY education ,NONVERBAL cues ,RESEARCH - Abstract
Facial dominance of West Point cadets, measured from their graduation portraits, is known to be related to cadets' ranks at the military academy, but it has been reported to be unrelated to their ranks in later career (Mazur, Mazur & Keating 1984). With improved methods of data collection and analysis, we show that cadets' facial dominance, while still unrelated to their ranks at midcareer, is related to promotions in late career, 20 or more years after the portraits were taken. These results suggest that the absence of physical features from current models of status attainment is a serious omission. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1996
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. TRENDS IN OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY IN INDIANAPOLIS.
- Author
-
Tully, Judy Corder, Jackson, Elton F., and Curtis, Richard F.
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,MARRIAGE licenses ,SOCIAL mobility ,INTERNAL migration - Abstract
Intergenerational occupational mobility patterns measured from survey data collected in Indianapolis, Indiana in 1966 and 1968 were compared to pattern present in Rogoff's 1910 and 1940 marriage license data. The following moderate differences appeared between the 1966-68 and the earlier data: (1) the proportion of people moving out of their stratum of origin remained about the same, but among the movers upward mobility became more common and downward mobility less common; (2) the linear dependence of son's occupation on father's occupation increased, mainly due to a high level of dependence for men under 24 years of age in 1966-68; (3) the 1966-68 mobility process, compared to the 1940 process, tended to produce an upgrading within both manual and nonmanual categories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY AND FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS.
- Author
-
Stuckert, Robert P.
- Subjects
SOCIAL mobility ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,FAMILY relations ,MARRIED women ,SOCIAL isolation ,SOCIAL support - Abstract
Many sociologists believe social mobility to he detrimental to extended family relations. An empirical examination of the relations between occupational mobility and four dimensions of family cohesion for a sample of married women supports this view. Furthermore, this is part of a broader pattern of general social isolation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1963
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. OCCUPATIONAL MOBILITY AND CHURCH PARTICIPATION.
- Author
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Curtis, Richard F.
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,RELIGIOUS institutions ,SPOUSES' legal relationship ,SOCIAL status ,SOCIAL mobility ,DOMESTIC relations - Abstract
This article analyses the relationship between occupational mobility and church participation. A general relationship between social status and religious identification has been well established. The evidence for a relationship between social status and participation in religious organizations is less precise. Apparently white-collar families attend more frequently than blue-collar families, but it may be that families at the very top and very bottom of the status system attend less frequently than those in the middle. The fact that religious participation of the wives of family heads was apparently unaffected by mobility may indicate that the problems of inter-personal relations associated with mobility are much less severe in the case of the wife, who may or may not have experienced cultural change herself. In the case of a nonmobile wife married to a mobile husband, for example, interpersonal problems should be expected to arise between husband and wife rather than in the social participation of the wife.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. THE CAREER EXPERIENCE OF THE SYMPHONY MUSICIAN.
- Author
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Westby, David L.
- Subjects
SYMPHONY orchestras ,MUSICIANS ,MUSICAL groups ,CAREER changes ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,MUSICIANS' salaries ,APATHY - Abstract
This article cites a study of career experience and career aspiration of the symphony musicians in the U.S. The situation of the symphony musician in the U.S. today is reflective of the somewhat tenuous economic status of symphonic music as an art form offering meaningful aesthetic experience to a limited public. They are caught between the potent forces of general public apathy, a management dominated labor market, and a union that in some ways works against his best interests. This study was conceived as broadly exploratory in design, and the material presented here is drawn from a larger study centering on the orchestra as a work group. The initial 6 weeks of the study were spent entirely in mutual familiarization. Based on interviews of several members of the group, it is analyzed that symphony musicians are an occupational group exhibiting considerable anxiety over their jobs on a number of dimensions, most prominently performance and security. This is especially true in their relations with the conductor, who has relatively unrestricted formal power and dominates the work situation to the extent that he is typically perceived as an imposing threat to artistic integrity and occupational security. At the question of mobility of musicians, two major factors were analyzed which are: the relative wage scale, and the length of the musical season. The prestigious character of the orchestra is not, however, the sole factor involved in the musician's mobility decisions.
- Published
- 1960
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. SOCIAL MOBILITY AND RADICALISM-CONSERVATISM.
- Author
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Hetzler, Stanley A.
- Subjects
SOCIAL mobility ,RADICALISM ,CONSERVATISM ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,SOCIOLOGY ,SOCIAL sciences - Abstract
The study of social mobility has been largely neglected by sociologists, despite its functional significance. One reason for this slight might be the long-term implications of such a program of study. The present study offers the means of investigating differences in satisfaction and radicalism-conservatism. Furthermore, it makes some provision for the intensity function. When a sample of 300 persons made estimates of their community social position for the year 1940 and these ratings were compared with estimates of their present community standing, the group as a whole gave evidence of social accession, but not to a marked degree. Occupational mobility as gauged by generational interstices has certain characteristics. It is a fluid bi-directional process. It occurs on a fairly large scale but is limited in range. The occupational transition between generations is more gradual than abrupt. No one occupational or educational group displayed a unique or viscid mobility trend. In as much as this does connote fluidity, it might be construed as socially beneficial.
- Published
- 1954
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. OCCUPATIONAL TRENDS AMONG IMMIGRANT GROUPS IN HAWAII.
- Author
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Lind, Andrew W.
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,OCCUPATIONAL mobility ,INTERNAL migration ,PLANTATION workers ,SOCIAL mobility ,ASSIMILATION of immigrants ,FOREIGN workers - Abstract
The article focuses on occupational trends among immigrant groups in Hawaii. Since the immigration flow to Hawaii of all except the Americans and some of the North European groups has been directed and controlled in the interests of the plantation labor demands, it follows that the natural accommodative tendencies of each of the immigrant groups can best be measured in terms of their exodus from the plantation and their invasion of other occupational fields. It is of course apparent that measurement is in terms of vertical and finally spatial movement, phenomena which are essentially psychological in character. Among other factors, the occupational drifts considered here furnish objective criteria of the attitudes developed by the various groups in the Hawaiian occupational setting. The persistent tendency of the Chinese, for example, to occupy the retail trades is to a very considerable degree a manifestation of a conscious choice. The high concentration of Hawaiians in the stevedoring and sea-faring occupations is as much an expression of the temperamental, traditional and habitual dispositions of the group as of the competitive situation within the industry.
- Published
- 1928
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Industrial Segmentation and Men's Intergenerational Mobility
- Author
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Tolbert, Charles M.
- Published
- 1983
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Social Mobility and Job Satisfaction: A Replication and Extension
- Author
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Bonjean, Charles M., Bruce, Grady D., and Williams,, J. Allen
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Homelessness, Affiliation, and Occupational Mobility
- Author
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Howard M. Bahr and Theodore Caplow
- Subjects
Homeless men ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,Anthropology ,Sample (statistics) ,Context (language use) ,Sociology ,Criminology ,Occupational mobility ,Control sample ,Social mobility ,Metropolitan area ,Test (assessment) - Abstract
Affiliation and employment histories obtained from a sample of skid-row men and a control sample of residents in a low-income metropolitan census tract are used in a test of the hypotheses that skid-row men are less affiliated than lower-class men in settled neighborhoods, and that downward occupational mobility is associated with loss of affiliations. Compared with the control sample, skid-row men have long histories of low affiliation, both before and after their arrival on skid row. The two samples did not differ much in occupational mobility, but their affiliative patterns have been quite different. Apparently the disaffiliation of skid-row men cannot be attributed to their downward mobility. Whether downward mobility is accompanied by disaffiliation seems to depend on the context in which it occurs. D espite a long tradition of research dealing with homeless men, many crucial questions about the phenomenon of homelessness remain to be answered. Numerous studies of vagrants, beggars, hobos, and other isolated persons have provided insight into the way homeless people live, but there are few thorough explorations of the social origins and consequences of homelessness. During the past 15 years the situation has changed somewhat. In preparation for urban renewal, Sacramento, Chicago, Minneapolis, and Philadelphia have completed large-scale action-oriented surveys of their skid rows.1 These studies have provided descriptions of skid row and its men, but have not answered some fundamental questions about the development of homelessness. The present paper examines one of these questions, that of the relation between occupational mobility and dis
- Published
- 1968
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