追随父母的脚步?利用兄弟姐妹数据分析苏格兰社会(dis)优势的代际传递

IF 3.1 1区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY
Cristina Iannelli, Richard Breen, Adriana Duta
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要本研究为个体职业地位在多大程度上受原生家庭(归属)和教育程度(成就)的影响提供了新的证据。利用苏格兰纵向研究的相关行政数据,我们使用兄弟姐妹相关性来衡量代际流动性,并通过检查兄弟姐妹之间和兄弟姐妹内部的差异来评估兄弟姐妹的教育对其职业地位的影响。我们表明,在苏格兰,大约36%的兄弟姐妹在职业地位上的差异可归因于共同的家庭因素。我们观察到的家庭背景测量可以解释大约40%的共同家庭效应,这意味着苏格兰劳动力市场中基于家庭的优势在很大程度上源于未测量的因素。我们还发现,兄弟姐妹的受教育程度占家庭之间职业地位差异的80%。虽然这可能表明苏格兰劳动力市场是高度精英化的,但之前的研究表明,家庭对教育程度的影响非常大,这让我们得出了不同的解释,即教育方面的社会不平等是家庭之间不平等在苏格兰劳动力市场上重现(也许是合法化)的主要机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Following in the parents’ footsteps? Using sibling data to analyse the intergenerational transmission of social (dis)advantage in Scotland
Abstract This study provides new evidence about the extent to which individual occupational status is determined by family of origin (ascription) and by educational attainment (achievement). Using linked administrative data from the Scottish Longitudinal Study, we measure intergenerational mobility using sibling correlations and we assess the effect of siblings’ education on their occupational status by examining between- and within-sibling differences. We show that about 36 per cent of siblings’ variation in occupational status in Scotland is attributable to shared family factors. Our observed measures of family background explain about 40 per cent of the shared family effect, meaning that family-based advantages in the Scottish labour market largely arise from unmeasured factors. We also find that siblings’ educational attainment accounts for 80 per cent of the variation between families in occupational status. While this may suggest that the Scottish labour market is highly meritocratic, previous research that showed a very strong family effect on educational attainment leads us to a different interpretation, namely that social inequalities in education are the main mechanism through which inequalities between families are reproduced (and perhaps legitimated) in the Scottish labour market.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
9.40%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: European Sociological Review contains articles in all fields of sociology ranging in length from short research notes up to major reports.
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