2019
DOI: 10.1093/sf/soz012
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Education-Based Status in Comparative Perspective: The Legitimization of Education as a Basis for Social Stratification

Abstract: Classical and recent accounts of education posit that education legitimately, and authoritatively, classifies individuals to positions of lower or higher status. However, despite these general theoretical claims, empirical evidence that provides an in-depth picture of the relationship between educational attainment and social status remains scarce. In this paper, based on a dataset of 31 countries (International Social Survey Programme), we investigate the extent to which education is related to subjective soc… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(56 citation statements)
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“…Cramer, 2016 ; Jarness & Flemmen, 2019 ; Lamont, 2000 ; Mckenzie, 2017 ; Williams, 2017 ). This feeds what Lamont ( 2018 , 2019 ) has called the “recognition gap” and resonates with the literature on feelings of status anxiety and misrecognition among individuals who feel socially subordinated (Gidron & Hall, 2017 , 2019 ), such as less‐educated citizens (van Noord et al., 2019 ; Sandel, 2020 ; Spruyt et al., 2015 , 2018 ; Spruyt & Kuppens, 2015 ).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Cramer, 2016 ; Jarness & Flemmen, 2019 ; Lamont, 2000 ; Mckenzie, 2017 ; Williams, 2017 ). This feeds what Lamont ( 2018 , 2019 ) has called the “recognition gap” and resonates with the literature on feelings of status anxiety and misrecognition among individuals who feel socially subordinated (Gidron & Hall, 2017 , 2019 ), such as less‐educated citizens (van Noord et al., 2019 ; Sandel, 2020 ; Spruyt et al., 2015 , 2018 ; Spruyt & Kuppens, 2015 ).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Income and education independently predict subjective social status: Higher educated people and those with higher incomes place themselves higher on the social ladder. However, the relation between education and subjective social status is more independent of the relation with income in countries with a larger proportion of higher educated people [28]. Similarly, education has a stronger (negative) relation with feelings of exclusion from society and trust in institutions in countries with a larger proportion of higher educated [29].…”
Section: Social Class As a Predictor Of Social And Political Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, in this context of intensifying pressures to expand education, Western high-stakes exam regimes were maintained at the primary level because they provided an efficient and formally (but not in practice) meritocratic mechanism for stratifying students (Kellaghan and Greaney 1992). As education became increasingly linked to an organized stratification system, higher-paying jobs and occupational status were increasingly tied to higher levels of educational attainment (van Noord et al forthcoming). In this context, high-stakes exams were seen as instrumental for maintaining uniform academic standards in a country’s education system and structuring educational stratification along formally (but not in practice) meritocratic processes (Bol et al 2014; Jackson and Buckner 2016).…”
Section: Global Colonial Processes and Path Dependence In The Use Of mentioning
confidence: 99%