Microclass immobility during industrialisation in the USA and Norway

The ‘microclass’ approach advocated by Grusky, Weeden and colleagues emphasises finegrained occupational differences and their relevance to social reproduction and social mobility. Using recent developments in historical occupational classifications, we adopted a microclass approach to the analysis...

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Published inActa sociologica Vol. 62; no. 2; pp. 193 - 210
Main Authors Griffiths, Dave, Lambert, Paul S, Zijdeman, Richard L, van Leeuwen, Marco HD, Maas, Ineke
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London, England Sage Publications, Ltd 01.05.2019
SAGE Publications
Sage Publications Ltd
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ISSN0001-6993
1502-3869
2067-3809
DOI10.1177/0001699318766231

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Summary:The ‘microclass’ approach advocated by Grusky, Weeden and colleagues emphasises finegrained occupational differences and their relevance to social reproduction and social mobility. Using recent developments in historical occupational classifications, we adopted a microclass approach to the analysis of intergenerational social mobility using linked census data for Norway and the USA in the late 19th and early 20th century (1850–1910). We describe a procedure that offers an operationalisation of microclass units for these datasets, and show how its application enables us to disentangle different forms of immobility which would not be distinguished in other approaches. Results suggest that microclass immobility is an important part of social reproduction in both Norway and the United States during the era of industrialisation. Both countries reveal a similar balance between ‘big class’ and ‘microclass’ immobility patterns. In Norway, the relative importance of microclasses in social reproduction regimes, when compared to the role of ‘big class’ structures, seems to decline very slightly over the course of industrialisation; but in the USA the relative importance of microclasses seems if anything to increase over the period.
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ISSN:0001-6993
1502-3869
2067-3809
DOI:10.1177/0001699318766231