Mare Robert D
University of California, Los Angeles.
Res Soc Stratif Mobil. 2014 Mar 1;35:121-128. doi: 10.1016/j.rssm.2014.01.004.
The articles in this special issue show the vitality and progress of research on multigenerational aspects of social mobility, stratification, and inequality. The effects of the characteristics and behavior of grandparents and other kin on the statuses, resources, and positions of their descendants are best viewed in a demographic context. Intergenerational effects work through both the intergenerational associations of socioeconomic characteristics and also differential fertility and mortality. A combined socioeconomic and demographic framework informs a research agenda which addresses the following issues: how generational effects combine with variation in age, period, and cohort within each generation; distinguishing causal relationships across generations from statistical associations; how multigenerational effects vary across socioeconomic hierarchies, including the possibility of stronger effects at the extreme top and bottom; distinguishing between endowments and investments in intergenerational effects; multigenerational effects on associated demographic behaviors and outcomes (especially fertility and mortality); optimal tradeoffs among diverse types of data on multigenerational processes; and the variability across time and place in how kin, education, and other institutions affect stratification.
本期特刊中的文章展示了社会流动、分层和不平等的多代方面研究的活力与进展。祖父母及其他亲属的特征和行为对其后代的地位、资源和位置的影响,最好在人口统计学背景下看待。代际效应通过社会经济特征的代际关联以及不同的生育率和死亡率起作用。一个综合的社会经济和人口统计学框架为一个研究议程提供了信息,该议程解决以下问题:代际效应如何与每一代人内部年龄、时期和队列的变化相结合;区分代际间的因果关系与统计关联;多代效应如何在社会经济等级制度中变化,包括在极端顶端和底端可能有更强效应的可能性;区分代际效应中的禀赋和投资;多代效应对相关人口行为和结果(特别是生育率和死亡率)的影响;关于多代过程的不同类型数据之间的最佳权衡;以及亲属关系、教育和其他制度影响分层的方式在时间和地点上的变异性。