Volume 41 - Article 49 | Pages 1373–1400
Educational reproduction in Europe: A descriptive account
By Richard Breen, John Ermisch, Satu Helske
References
Börsch-Supan, Axel, Brandt, Martina, Litwin, Howard, and Weber, Guglielmo (2013). Active ageing and solidarity between generations in Europe. Berlin: De Gruyter.
Breen, Richard (2004). Social mobility in Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Breen, Richard and Ermisch, John (2017). Educational reproduction in Great Britain: A prospective approach. European Sociological Review 33(4).
Erikson, Robert and Goldthorpe, John (1992). The constant flux. A study of class mobility in industrial societies. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Hillmert, Steffen (2013). Analysing intergenerational transmissions: From social mobility to social reproduction. Comparative Social Research 30.
Klevmarken, Anders, Swensson, Bengt, and Hesselius, Patrik (2005). The SHARE sampling procedures and calibrated design weights. In: Börsch-Supan, A. and H, Jürges (eds.). The Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe – Methodology. Mannheim: Mannheim Research Institute for the Economics of Aging (MEA): 28–69.
Lawrence, Matthew and Breen, Richard (2016). And their children after them? The effect of college on educational reproduction. American Journal of Sociology 122(2).
Maralani, Vida (2013). The demography of social mobility: Black-white differences in the process of educational reproduction. American Journal of Sociology 118(6).
Mare, Robert D. and Maralani, Vida (2006). The intergenerational effects of changes in women’s educational attainments. American Sociological Review 71(4).
Oecd (2017). Education at a Glance 2017.
Shavit, Yossi and Blossfeld, Hans-Peter (1993). Persistent inequalities: A comparative study of educational attainment in thirteen countries. Boulder: Westview Press.
Song, Xi and Mare, Robert D. (2015). Prospective versus retrospective approaches to the study of intergenerational social mobility. Sociological Methods and Research 44(4).