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The creation of a more open society and improving race equality are current core policy concerns. Understanding the part class and ethnicity plays in determining life chances is critical to policies tackling inequality and promoting opportunity. This report aids such understanding by investigating the impact of class background and ethnicity on class position. Migration and Mobility traces patterns of intergenerational social mobility for children from different ethnic groups all growing up in England and Wales in the 1960s to 1980s. This study directly measures the class and other…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The creation of a more open society and improving race equality are current core policy concerns. Understanding the part class and ethnicity plays in determining life chances is critical to policies tackling inequality and promoting opportunity. This report aids such understanding by investigating the impact of class background and ethnicity on class position. Migration and Mobility traces patterns of intergenerational social mobility for children from different ethnic groups all growing up in England and Wales in the 1960s to 1980s. This study directly measures the class and other characteristics of study members' parents in 1971 and 1981 and their own outcomes in 2001. We know very little about patterns of parent-to-child social class mobility for Britain's minority ethnic groups. This study therefore provides a major contribution to our understanding in this area. Uniquely, it also examines how religion can supplement our understanding of ethnic minority social mobility. Relevant
Autorenporträt
Lucinda Platt is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Essex. Her research focuses on issues relating to minority ethnic groups and on child poverty. She is the author of Discovering child poverty, published by The Policy Press in January 2005.