Social Mobility in Industrial Society

Front Cover
University of California Press, 1967 - 309 pages
In a careful analysis of the existing literature, the authors marshal an imposing array of evidence in support of their major argument that social mobility is an integral and continuing aspect of the process of industrialization. This classic volume continues to be a basic reference source in the field of occupational mobility.
 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
Percentage of respondents whose first and whose pres
2
Part
7
FIGURES
18
IDEOLOGICAL EQUALITARIANISM AND SOCIAL MOBILITY
76
SOCIAL MOBILITY AND THE AMERICAN BUSINESS ELITE
114
THE OAKLAND MOBILITY STUDY
147
INTRAGENERATIONAL MOBILITY
156
SOME SOURCES OF INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY
182
Part Three
201
INTELLIGENCE AND MOTIVATION
227
SOCIAL MOBILITY AND SOCIAL STRUCTURE
260
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About the author (1967)

Seymour Martin Lipset: March 18, 1922 - December 31, 2006 American political theorist and sociologist, Seymour Martin Lipset, was born in New York City on March 18, 1922, and educated at City College of New York and Columbia University. Lipset taught at a number of universities, including the University of Toronto, Columbia University, the University of California at Berkeley, Harvard University, and Stanford University. A senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, he was also a member of the International Society of Political Psychology, the American Political Science Association, and the American Academy of Science. Among Lipset's many works are "Political Man: The Social Bases of Politics" (1960), "Class, Status, and Power" (1953), and "Revolution and Counterrevolution" (1968). He also contributed articles to a number of magazines, including The New Republic, Encounter, and Commentary. Lipset has received a number of awards for his work, including the MacIver Award in 1962, the Gunnar Myrdal Prize in 1970, and the Townsend Harris Medal in 1971. Lipset died on December 31, 2006, as a result of complications following a stroke. He was 84.

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