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2015 | 3 | 29--44
Tytuł artykułu

The EGP Class Scheme: In Search of a Theory

Treść / Zawartość
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
The present paper engages polemically perhaps the most popular class typology developed by John Goldthorpe and his associates. It is commonly believed that this model, as grounded in employement relations, is economic in character, and thus opposed to an alternative way of conceptualising class based on cultural considerations. It is demonstrated in the paper that whilst the above-mentioned attribution of the class scheme under consideration may be true, it is nevertheless too narrow to the extent that the framework concerned lacks a genuinely socio-economic character, or conceives it one-sidedly. As the paper shows, most, if not all drawbacks of the class taxonomy under consideration stems from neglecting a key dimension to the economy, and at the same time- its interface with society, that is to say, property relations that are only marginally taken consideration of in the EGP scheme. Consequently, the EGP class typology is found wanting in that it confounds classes of very different socio-economic or property status. These shortcomings generate controversies, one of which, related to the supposed unity of the service or middle class is examined in detail. By contrast, it is shown in the paper that it is only through rendering ownership the basic building block through to build the overall map of social differentiation that an adequate and relatively accurate picture of basic societal divisions can be painted. This concerns not only economic ownership, but also non-economic ownership as a criterion for determining the position in the extra-economic domain of society occupied by the social estates.(original abstract)
Słowa kluczowe
Rocznik
Tom
3
Strony
29--44
Opis fizyczny
Twórcy
  • Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, Poland
Bibliografia
  • Baron, J. & M. Hannan. "The Impact of Economics on Contemporary Sociology." Journal of Economic Literature 32 (1994) 1111-1146.
  • Chan T.W. and Goldthorpe J.H., Class and Status: The Conceptual Distinction and its Empirical Relevance', American Sociological Review 72 (2007) 512-532.
  • Chan T.W., Goldthorpe J.H., Social Status and Newspaper Readership', American Journal of Sociology 1124 (2007) 1095-1134.
  • Crompton R., Scott J. (2005). 'Class analysis, beyond the cultural turn' in Devine, F., Savage, M., Scott, J. and Crompton, R., Rethinking Class, Palgrave Macmillan: Basingstoke.
  • Crompton R. (1993; 1998). Class and Stratification, Polity: Cambridge. Crompton, R. 2006. Employment and the Family: the Reconfiguration of Work and Family Life in Contemporary Societies, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
  • Erikson, R. and Goldthorpe, J. (1992). The Constant Flux: A Study of Class Mobility in Industrial Societies, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Erikson R., Jonsson J.O. (1993). Ursprung och Utbildning, Stockholm: Statens Offentliga Utredningar.
  • Evans Jeffrey and Colin Mills December. In search of the wage-labour /service contract: new evidence on the validity of the Goldthorpe class schema, British Journal of Sociology 51(4) (2000) 641-661.
  • Goldthorpe J., 'Class analysis and the reorientation of class theory: the case of persisting differentials in educational attainment, British Journal of Sociology 47(3) (1996) 481-505.
  • Goldthorpe, J. 2010. 'Class Analysis and the Reorientation of Class Theory: The Case of Persisting Differentials in Educational Attainment', The British Journal of Sociology - The BJS: Shaping Sociology Over 60 Years: 311-335. [Originally published in 1996 British Journal of Sociology 473: 481-505.]
  • Goldthorpe, J. and G. Marshall 1992. 'The Promising Future of Class Analysis: A Response to Recent Critiques', Sociology 263: 381-400.
  • Goldthorpe, J. and Marshall, G. 1992. 'The Promising Future of Class Analysis: A Response to Recent Critiques', Sociology 263: 381-400.
  • Goldthorpe, J.H. and Marshall, G. 1992. 'The Promising Future of Class Analysis: A Response to Recent Critiques', Sociology 26: 381-400.
  • Grusky, David, and Jesper B. Sorensen. 1998. "Can Class Analysis Be Salvaged?" American Journal of Sociology 103:1187-1234.
  • Pahl, R.E. 1989. 'Is the Emperor Naked?' International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 134: 709-720.
  • Pahl, R.E. 1993. 'Does Class Analysis without Class Theory have a Promising Future? A Reply to Goldthorpe and Marshall, Sociology 27: 253-258.
  • Prandy, K. 2002. 'Ideal types, stereotypes and classes', British Journal of Sociology 534: 583-602.
  • Savage, M. 2000. Class Analysis and Social Transformation, Buckingham: Open University Press.
  • Scott, J. 1996. 'Comment on Goldthorpe', British Journal of Sociology 47: 507-512.
  • Scott J., Central concerns in social stratification research: comments on Goldthorpe, British Journal of Sociology 61(1) (2010) 337-341.
  • Sorensen, A. 2000. 'Employment Relations and Class Structure', in Crompton, R., Devine, F., Savage, M. and Scott, J. eds. Renewing Class Analysis, Oxford: Blackwells.
  • Wong, Y.L. 2001. Family Strategy: A Study of Intergenerational Mobility in Hong Kong Oxford: D.Phil. Thesis, Nuffield College, University of Oxford.
  • Wong Yi-Lee, A unified middle class or two middle classes? A comparison of career strategies and intergenerational mobility strategies between teachers and managers in contemporary Hong Kong. British Journal of Sociology 55(2) (2004).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikatory
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.ekon-element-000171345157

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