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      A Multigenerational View of Inequality

      research-article
      Demography
      Springer US
      Multigenerational, Social mobility, Lineages, Inequality

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          Abstract

          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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          Most cited references28

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          Trends in educational assortative marriage from 1940 to 2003.

          This paper reports trends in educational assortative marriage from 1940 to 2003 in the United States. Analyses of census and Current Population Survey data show that educational homogamy decreased from 1940 to 1960 but increased from 1960 to 2003. From 1960 to the early 1970s, increases in educational homogamy were generated by decreasing intermarriage among groups of relatively well-educated persons. College graduates, in particular; were increasingly likely to marry each other rather than those with less education. Beginning in the early 1970s, however; continued increases in the odds of educational homogamy were generated by decreases in intermarriage at both ends of the education distribution. Most striking is the decline in the odds that those with very low levels of education marry up. Intermarriage between college graduates and those with "some college" continued to decline but at a more gradual pace. As intermarriage declined at the extremes of the education distribution, intermarriage among those in the middle portion of the distribution increased. These trends, which are similar for a broad cross section of married couples and for newlyweds, are consistent with a growing social divide between those with very low levels of education and those with more education in the United States.
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            Two Decades of Family Change: The Shifting Economic Foundations of Marriage

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              The genetic legacy of the Mongols.

              We have identified a Y-chromosomal lineage with several unusual features. It was found in 16 populations throughout a large region of Asia, stretching from the Pacific to the Caspian Sea, and was present at high frequency: approximately 8% of the men in this region carry it, and it thus makes up approximately 0.5% of the world total. The pattern of variation within the lineage suggested that it originated in Mongolia approximately 1,000 years ago. Such a rapid spread cannot have occurred by chance; it must have been a result of selection. The lineage is carried by likely male-line descendants of Genghis Khan, and we therefore propose that it has spread by a novel form of social selection resulting from their behavior.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                mare@ucla.edu
                Journal
                Demography
                Demography
                Springer US (Boston )
                0070-3370
                1533-7790
                27 January 2011
                27 January 2011
                February 2011
                : 48
                : 1
                : 1-23
                Affiliations
                Department of Sociology, University of California–Los Angeles, 264 Haines Hall, Box 951551, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1551 USA
                Article
                14
                10.1007/s13524-011-0014-7
                3059821
                21271318
                8d271479-6d32-4053-a1e6-464ae6af05fa
                © The Author(s) 2011
                History
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Population Association of America 2011

                Sociology
                inequality,multigenerational,lineages,social mobility
                Sociology
                inequality, multigenerational, lineages, social mobility

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