Following in Father’s Footsteps
Social Mobility in Ireland
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Harvard University Press
Published:17th Jan '90
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This is the first systematic study of patterns of social mobility in Ireland. It covers a recent period—the 1960s—when Ireland was undergoing rapid economic growth and modernization. The author thus was able to test the widely accepted hypothesis that growth weakens class barriers. To his surprise he found that it did not. Social mobility increased somewhat, but among mobile men the better jobs still went to those from advantaged social class origins. Despite economic development and demographic change, the underlying link between social origins and career destinations remained unchanged.
In chapters on education, life cycle, religion, and farming, Michael Hout shows how inequality persists in contemporary Ireland. In the last chapter he reviews evidence from other countries and concludes that governments must take action against class barriers in education and employment practices if inequality is to be reduced. Economic growth creates jobs, he argues, but economic growth alone cannot allocate those jobs fairly.
Following in Father’s Footsteps is the most substantial national monograph on the relationship of social mobility to industrialization that we now have and is sure to get a lot of favorable attention, both for its challenging thesis and for its methodological fertility. -- Otis Dudley Duncan
ISBN: 9780674307285
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 771g
384 pages