Intergenerational class mobility and the convergence thesis: reflections 25 years laterb jos_1289 221.. 224
Michael HoutThe extraordinary trio of papers by Robert Erikson, John H. Goldthorpe and Lucienne Portocarero in the British Journal of Sociology in 1979Sociology in , 1982Sociology in , and 1983 advanced thinking and research in the field of social stratification and mobility. Their agenda became the agenda of the whole research committee on stratification and mobility within the International Sociological Association (known as RC28) for over a decade thereafter. The agenda was to quantify mobility similarities and differences over time and between nations and to use the results to test hypotheses about the social sources of those differences. The 1983 paper reproduced here announced that agenda and its results anticipated the main conclusions of the research that followed.Comparative mobility research of the late 1970s and early 1980s grew out of three new resources. Large-scale studies of men's mobility patterns were conducted in five nations -France, Great Britain, the USA, Poland, and Hungary each provided high-quality data.Statistical work by LeoA.Goodman (collected in Goodman 1984) and Otis Dudley Duncan (1979) aided the enterprise.A bold and creative paper by Featherman, Jones, and Hauser (1975) comparing the American data with a smaller Australian data set provided a precise hypothesis of constant social fluidity -the FJH hypothesis -to orient work. Featherman, Jones, and Hauser also contributed a useful decomposition of mobility patterns into structural and circulation components that many researchers subsequently found useful.1 Erikson, Goldthorpe, and Portocarero used these tools -the French and British surveys, Goodman's models, and Featherman, Jones, and Hauser's ideas -to address both classical and contemporary questions. To marshall these resources, Erikson, Goldthorpe, and Portocarero needed one more tool: a class schema specific enough to capture distinctive structural features of each society under comparison and rooted in the classical concerns that motivated class analysis. The result -universally known now as the 'EGP Hout