1st Edition

Social Structure and Mobility in Economic Development

Edited By Seymour Lipset Copyright 2005
    418 Pages
    by Routledge

    414 Pages
    by Routledge

    The foundation of this volume is the notion that the several processes of change constituting economic and social development are systematically interrelated. The essence of development is the appearance of rapid rates of increases in many different indices--output per capita, political participation, literacy and the like. These quantitative changes are, however, commonly accompanied by vast changes in the social structure--markets emerge, political bureaucracies arise, and new educational systems appear. Written by the leading authorities on the subject, this group of papers tackles the causes and consequences of social mobility. Each author brings his particular skills to bear on various aspects of the problem in studies of persons moving from rural to urban settings, from one kind of industry to another and from one prestige level to another. Several of the papers review the theoretical and methodological issues involved in comparative research on social mobility while others compare and contrast traditional and modern stratification systems. Various papers explore the economic, religious and psychological basis of social mobility, concluding with enquiry into the consequences of rapid mobility, especially in terms of the political stability of developing nations. Because social mobility is a central consideration in any study of economic and social change, every student of change will use this pioneering reference source as a text for all future research. Contributors include Otis Dudley Duncan, Harold L. Wilensky, Michael G. Smith, Bert F. Hoselitz, Wilbert E. Moore, Natalie Rogoff Rams°y, Gideon Sjoberg, Reinhard Bendix, Harry Crockett, David Matza, Lester Seligman, and Gino Germani. Neil J. Smelser is emeritus professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley. Seymour Martin Lipset was professor of sociology and director of the Institute of International Studies at the University of California, Berkeley.

    1: Social Structure, Mobility and Development; 2: Methodological Issues in the Analysis of Social Mobility; 3: Measures and Effects of Social Mobility; 4: Pre-Industrial Stratification Systems; 5: Interaction between Industrial and Pre-Industrial Stratification Systems; 6: Changes in Occupational Structures; 7: Changes in Rates and Forms of Mobility; 8: Rural-Urban Balance and Models of Economic Development; 9: A Case Study in Cultural and Educational Mobility: Japan and the Protestant Ethic; 10: Psychological Origins of Mobility; 11: The Disreputable Poor; 12: Political Mobility and Economic Development; 13: Social and Political Consequences of Mobility

    Biography

    Neil J. Smelser is emeritus professor, Department of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley. Seymour Martin Lipset was professor of sociology and director of the Institute of International Studies at the University of California, Berkeley.