一条缓慢的下行之路:墨西哥发展中的职业地位

IF 1.8 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Harold J Toro
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引用次数: 1

摘要

墨西哥在20世纪50年代至21世纪初经历了几次经济转型,最引人注目的是在20世纪80年代融入世界经济。关于全球经济一体化、发展和不平等的社会学观点,对这些转变对劳动力群体职业地位的影响有着不同的预测。预计一体化将产生经济活力的观点预测了群体职业地位的改善,但国际分工(IDL)观点预测了职业地位的恶化。制度主义观点没有明确的预测。根据三项关于墨西哥社会流动性的调查(2006年和2011年、2016年),我考察了劳动力群体在职业地位方面的差异,以评估进入劳动力市场的历史时间是否影响了墨西哥工业化过程中的职业成就动态。我发现劳动群体成员对教育和父母职业状况的职业状况网有显著的直接影响。具体而言,在20世纪50年代至70年代初墨西哥工业化高峰期进入劳动力市场,比在向新自由主义政策过渡和随后的制度化过程中进入劳动力市场的地位更高。这些发现与社会学中强调国际分工分层中心地位的观点最为一致,但为制度主义观点提供了部分支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Slow Downward Road: Occupational Status Attainment in Mexico’s Development
Mexico underwent several economic transformations between the 1950s and the early 21st century, most notably its integration to the world economy as of the 1980s. Sociological perspectives on global economic integration, development, and inequality, have contrasting predictions for the effect of these transformations on labor cohort occupational status. Perspectives that anticipate integration to spawn economic dynamism, predict improved occupational status over cohorts, but the international division of labor (IDL) perspective predicts worsening occupational status attainment. The institutionalist perspective does not have clear-cut predictions. Drawing on three surveys on Mexican social mobility (2006 and 2011, 2016), I examine labor cohort differences in occupational status to evaluate whether historical timing of entry into the workforce shapes occupational achievement dynamics throughout Mexico’s industrialization. I find significant direct effects of labor cohort membership on occupational status net of education and of parental occupational status. Specifically, entering the workforce at the height of Mexico’s industrialization, between the 1950s and early 1970s, led to higher status than entering during the transition to and subsequent institutionalization of neoliberal policy. The findings are most consistent with perspectives in sociology that emphasize the centrality for stratification of the international division of labor, but provide partial support for institutionalist perspectives.
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来源期刊
Social Currents
Social Currents SOCIOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
26
期刊介绍: Social Currents, the official journal of the Southern Sociological Society, is a broad-ranging social science journal that focuses on cutting-edge research from all methodological and theoretical orientations with implications for national and international sociological communities. The uniqueness of Social Currents lies in its format. The front end of every issue is devoted to short, theoretical, agenda-setting contributions and brief, empirical and policy-related pieces. The back end of every issue includes standard journal articles that cover topics within specific subfields of sociology, as well as across the social sciences more broadly.
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