2020
DOI: 10.1177/0038038520929562
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Ethnic, Religious and Gender Differences in Intragenerational Economic Mobility in England and Wales

Abstract: This study uses data from consecutive England and Wales censuses to examine the intragenerational economic mobility of individuals with different ethnicities, religions and genders between 1971 and 2011, over time and across cohorts. The findings suggest more downward and less upward mobility among Black Caribbean, Indian Sikh and Muslim people with Bangladeshi, Indian and Pakistani ethnicities, relative to white British groups, and more positive relative progress among Indian Hindu people, but also some varia… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…For example, historical experiences of minority ethnic groups and long-term discrimination may lead to a higher proportion working in lower paid jobs on insecure contracts without sickness benefits and in public-facing occupations, living in crowded housing conditions, and having fewer resources for health (eg, education, income). 15 These factors are likely to increase psychosocial stress, mental health problems and harmful health behaviours (eg, smoking, poor diet and physical inactivity). There is also a wealth of evidence documenting inequalities faced by minority ethnic groups in accessing quality healthcare.…”
Section: Understanding Ethnicitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, historical experiences of minority ethnic groups and long-term discrimination may lead to a higher proportion working in lower paid jobs on insecure contracts without sickness benefits and in public-facing occupations, living in crowded housing conditions, and having fewer resources for health (eg, education, income). 15 These factors are likely to increase psychosocial stress, mental health problems and harmful health behaviours (eg, smoking, poor diet and physical inactivity). There is also a wealth of evidence documenting inequalities faced by minority ethnic groups in accessing quality healthcare.…”
Section: Understanding Ethnicitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…67 We argue that what we are witnessing in this pandemic mirrors injustices created by a history of colonialism, slavery and segregation, which continue to thrive in our structures, and across generations through racialized capitalism, as well as injustices perpetuated by business as usual, that is the ways in 69 Social processes do not operate in isolation, but co-occur. Sequentially, this leads to deepening inequalities in many domains across a life course, 70 and indeed routinely transmitted from one generation to the next. 71 To some extent, what we are appealing to here is captured in Bonilla-Silva's highly influential account of racialized social system theory.…”
Section: Centring Racial Justice In Our Quest For Health Justicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hence, the religious tendency of society did matter a lot for gender inequality. Karlsen et al. (2020) investigated the ethnic, religious, and gender gap in the UK.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%