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/soc/ - Sociology


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25 Dec 2021Mathchan is launched into public

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Persistence Despite Revolutions
>https://www.nber.org/papers/w27053

Very interesting study on the development and constant nature of social status.

It has always fascinated me that almost all peoples and epochs have developed a kind of aristocracy over generations.
>>
About herability of inequality
"From an extensive family lineage of 426,552 persons in England 1650-2023 we estimate the influence of mothers versus fathers on social outcomes 1754-2023. Mothers’ and fathers’ education and social status are equally predictive of most child social outcomes across the entire period, even for the patriarchical society of eighteenth-nineteenth century England."
Gregory Clark & Neil Cummins, 2024. "Matriline versus Patriline: Social Mobility in England, 1754-2023," Working Papers 0248, European Historical Economics Society (EHES).