地位获得过程中的阶级和野心:西班牙复制。

W. Haller, A. Portes
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引用次数: 10

摘要

有两种主要的理论流派试图解释成年早期的地位结果:一种关注阶级特权的代际传递,另一种强调个人特征,尤其是野心。第一种被称为结构主义学派,第二种被称为心理社会学派,以威斯康星地位获得模型为基础。第二种结构主义观点,分段同化,强调社会经济地位在移民世代之间的传递,但强调共同种族资源在向上流动和防止向下同化方面的积极作用。我们使用西班牙青年的大型纵向样本来检验这些替代预测,其中包括本地父母的孩子和移民的孩子。西班牙具有独特的特点,使其适合检验这些预测。结果表明,家庭社会经济地位和抱负(以青少年的教育愿望和期望衡量)在教育和职业成就中都起着重要作用,但即使在控制了抱负之后,家庭地位的影响仍然存在。除了在中国和菲律宾青年中,在这些控制之后,共同民族的影响消失了,结果与分段同化一致。地位获得的预测模型在移民子女和本地人子女身上得出了相同的结果,这表明在西班牙,移民子女和本地人子女已经成为共同青年群体的一部分。讨论了分析的理论和实践意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Class and ambition in the status attainment process: A Spanish replication.
There are two principal theoretical schools that seek to explain status outcomes in early adulthood: those focusing on intergenerational transmission of class privilege and those emphasizing individual characteristics, particularly ambition. The first may be called the structuralist school and the second the psycho-social school, following the Wisconsin Model of Status Attainment. A second structuralist perspective, Segmented Assimilation, highlights transmission of socio-economic status across immigrant generations, but emphasizes the positive role of co-ethnic resources for upward mobility and preventing downward assimilation. We examine these alternative predictions using a large longitudinal sample of youths in Spain that includes both children of native parentage and children of immigrants. Spain possesses characteristics that make it uniquely suitable to examine these predictions. Results show that both family socio-economic status and ambition, measured by adolescent educational aspirations and expectations, play important roles in educational and occupational attainment, but the influence of family status persists even after controlling for ambition. The influence of co-ethnic nationalities disappears after these controls, except among Chinese and Filipino youths, a result consistent with segmented assimilation. Predictive models of status attainment yield identical results for children of immigrants and children of natives, indicating that in Spain, they have become part of a common youth universe. Theoretical and practical implications of the analysis are discussed.
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