Intergenerational and Marriage Mobility of University Professors in the Netherlands During the 19th Century

In this study we ask the question to what extent 19th-century university professors were a closed occupational group in the sense that they had little intergenerational and marriage mobility. We do so in honor of Kees Mandemakers, who is about to retire as a professor, but whose younger family membe...

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Published inHistorical life course studies Vol. 10; pp. 167 - 171
Main Authors Maas, Ineke, Van Leeuwen, Marco H. D., Knigge, Antonie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published European Historical Population Samples Network 31.03.2021
International Institute of Social History
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ISSN2352-6343
2352-6343
DOI10.51964/hlcs9588

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Summary:In this study we ask the question to what extent 19th-century university professors were a closed occupational group in the sense that they had little intergenerational and marriage mobility. We do so in honor of Kees Mandemakers, who is about to retire as a professor, but whose younger family members may follow in his footsteps. We derive competing hypotheses from cultural capital theory and the meritocracy thesis and test them using civil marriage records for the period 1813–1922 in six Dutch provinces (N = 1,180,976 marriages). Although only 4.4% of all university professors had a father in the same occupation, the odds ratio of 331 shows that this is much more likely than to be expected under independence. Similarly, professors were much more likely to marry the daughter of a professor. Compared to other elite occupations the intergenerational immobility of professors was not especially high, but their marriage immobility was exceptional. Cultural capital theory receives more support than the meritocracy thesis. We hope that Mandemakers, Mandemakers and Mandemakers will accept the challenge and investigate whether these findings can be generalized to contemporary society.
ISSN:2352-6343
2352-6343
DOI:10.51964/hlcs9588