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      The price of the ticket revised: Family members’ experiences of upward social mobility

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      The Sociological Review
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          In recent years, there has been a revived sociological interest in assessing the lived experience of upward social mobility. Several qualitative accounts have highlighted the negative emotional imprints of upward mobility, whereas quantitative researchers have suggested that the picture is far more optimistic. However, both strands of literature rely too narrowly on the perspectives of the upwardly mobile individuals themselves. Against this empirical strategy, which is expressed in recent works on upward social mobility, this article turns attention on the family members of those who experienced upward mobility. Drawing on biographical interviews with upwardly mobile individuals and their family members, the article explores, firstly, the participants’ diverging experiences and assessments of upward mobility, and secondly, how the process affects not only the emotional life of the upwardly mobile individuals themselves, but also of those who are commonly seen as having been ‘left behind’. In doing so, the article shows that including the voices of family members can refocus social mobility research on the wider psycho-social costs and consequences of what are often portrayed as stories of individual ‘success’.

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          Most cited references61

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          A Multigenerational View of Inequality

          The study of intergenerational mobility and most population research are governed by a two-generation (parent-to-offspring) view of intergenerational influence, to the neglect of the effects of grandparents and other ancestors and nonresident contemporary kin. While appropriate for some populations in some periods, this perspective may omit important sources of intergenerational continuity of family-based social inequality. Social institutions, which transcend individual lives, help support multigenerational influence, particularly at the extreme top and bottom of the social hierarchy, but to some extent in the middle as well. Multigenerational influence also works through demographic processes because families influence subsequent generations through differential fertility and survival, migration, and marriage patterns, as well as through direct transmission of socioeconomic rewards, statuses, and positions. Future research should attend more closely to multigenerational effects; to the tandem nature of demographic and socioeconomic reproduction; and to data, measures, and models that transcend coresident nuclear families.
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            The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good?

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              Habitus Clivé and the Emotional Imprint of Social Mobility

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Sociological Review
                The Sociological Review
                SAGE Publications
                0038-0261
                1467-954X
                April 28 2023
                : 003802612311677
                Affiliations
                [1 ]London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
                Article
                10.1177/00380261231167748
                f2f7a8f1-4fbc-4dad-885d-594453f78c4f
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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