The class structure provides an important context for the study of social mobility. The evolution of the class structure is the all-important factor determining individuals' changing experience of mobility, as expressed in absolute rates. The total mobility rate shows long-term stability; but, because of structural change, trends of rising upward and falling downward mobility in the mid-20th century are now being reversed. Relative mobility rates, comparing the chances of individuals of different class origins arriving at different class destinations, also show long-term stability. All this is evident over a period of more or less continuous educational expansion and reform-thus calling into question the belief that educational policy is key to promoting mobility. Education is best considered as a 'positional' good; and the motivation, and capacity, of parents in more advantaged class positions to help their children maintain their competitive edge in the educational system, and in turn in labour markets, underlies the resistance to change that the mobility regime displays.
INTRODUCTION: THE CLASS STRUCTURE AS THE CONTEXT OF SOCIAL MOBILTYThis lecture reports on research being undertaken by a group of sociologists, based in the Department of Social Policy and Intervention at the University of Oxford, to which I belong. Our concern is with social mobility in Britain over the period from the end of the Second World War down to the early 21st century. We focus on intergenerational mobility, and we also have a particular interest in the part that is played in such mobility by education. More specifically, we are concerned with the life-histories of men and women in a series of birth cohorts, and with how the social positions that these men and women attained in their lives are related to the positions that were held