David G. Burley. A Particular Condition in Life: Self-Employment and Social Mobility in Mid-Victorian Brantford, Ontario. Buffalo, N. Y.: McGill-Queen's University Press. 1994. Pp. xii, 309. $39.95

1996 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 358
Author(s):  
Douglas McCalla ◽  
David G. Burley ◽  
Gordon Darroch ◽  
Lee Soltow

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lucia Ruggera ◽  
Jani Erola

This article examines how processes of social closure promote persistence at the top ofthe occupational hierarchy and how it varies by gender. We focus on the link betweenprofessional closure strategies and intergenerational immobility in professionalemployment in Italy. Since Italian professions display the highest levels of service marketregulation across Europe and are the largest occupational group within the upper class,analyzing the link between professional closure and social inequality is crucial. ISTAT´ssurvey on Italian graduates (SPL, 2011), the Origin-Destination association isinvestigated at big-, meso- and micro-level with log-linear nested models. This sampleoffers in analyzing social mobility at the beginning of professionals’ careers and providein-depth explanations of micro-level dynamics of social reproduction. The analysesindicate that children of regulated professionals have a higher propensity to follow intheir parents’ footsteps (micro-classes). Self-employment functions as an independentdimension, which strongly increases intergenerational immobility at top similarly forprofessionals and larger entrepreneurs (meso- and micro-classes). Finally, itdemonstrates that the combination of specific parental resources strongly facilitatesprofessionals’ children to avoid social demotion (big-classes).


2020 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-139
Author(s):  
Davud Rostam-Afschar

AbstractOccupational licensing aims to restrict access for providing products and services to only those who promise a minimal level of quality by imposing time and cost-intensive barriers. This can be reasonable to verify personal experience, but bear substantial costs, which need to be justified with proven quality improvements. A series of studies shows that occupational licensing reduces self-employment and overall employment, may lead through limiting geographical and social mobility to higher wages, inequality, and unfair market entry. A more efficient and inclusive guarantee of quality could be achieved with focused, permeable, and independently verifiable occupational licensing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gregory N. Price

Abstract In fragile communities where a high proportion of residents have limited opportunities for economic and social mobility, self-employment and entrepreneurship are possible pathways to economic and social mobility. If, for example, individuals perceive policing and offender sentencing as racially discriminatory and/or untrustworthy, criminal justice in fragile communities could potentially be a barrier to an individual’s decision to start a business, as such a decision can be sensitive to whether the legal system will protect individual property rights. This paper considers how, in fragile communities, individual fairness assessments and perceptions of the criminal justice system condition nascent entrepreneurship abandonment—individuals who considered starting a business but did not. With data from the Center for Advancing Opportunity Fragile Community Survey on over 5,000 individuals in the United States, we estimate latent variable specifications of abandoned individual aspirations to start a business as a function of several measures of their fairness assessment/perception of the criminal justice system. Parameter estimates reveal that the likelihood of abandoned nascent entrepreneurship increases with respect to increases in an individual’s assessment/perception that the criminal justice system is unfair in their community. Our results suggest that the criminal justice system is a barrier to entrepreneurship for residents of fragile communities, and that criminal justice reforms that promote fairness in policing and the courts could enhance economic and social mobility in fragile communities by increasing the likelihood of individuals starting businesses.


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