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Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Lesson
26
SOCIAL
MOBILITY
Social
mobility is an act of moving
from one social class to
another. The amount of movement up
and
down
the class structure would indicate the
extent of social mobility prevalent in the
society.
The
social mobility is greatly influenced by
the level of openness
of the
society. Open
society is the
one
where
people attain their status primarily by
their own efforts. In fact the extent of
mobility may be taken
as
an
index of openness of a society
indicating how far talented
individuals born into lower
strata can move up
the
socioeconomic ladder. In this respect,
social mobility is an important
political issue, particularly in
countries
committed to liberal vision of equality of
opportunity to all citizens. In this
perspective industrial
societies
are mostly open societies portraying
high social mobility.
Compared with them,
pre-industrial
societies
have mostly been found to be
closed
societies where
there has been low
social mobility.
People
in
such societies have been
confined to their ancestral
occupations and their social
status has mostly
been
ascribed.
Social
mobility can be classified
as:
Vertical
mobility: The
movement of individuals and groups up or
down the socioeconomic scale.
Those
who
gain in property, income,
status, and position are
said to be upwardly
mobile, while
those who move in
the
opposite direction are downwardly
mobile.
Horizontal
mobility: The
movement of individuals and groups in
similar socioeconomic positions,
which
may
be in different work situations.
This may involve change in
occupation or remaining in the same
occupation
but in a different organization, or may
be in the same organization but at a
different location.
Lateral
mobility: It is a
geographical movement between neighborhoods, towns or
regions. In modern
societies
there is a great deal of
geographical mobility. Lateral mobility
is often combined with vertical as
well
as horizontal mobility.
The
movement of people up or down the social
hierarchy can be looked at either
within one generation
called
intra-generational mobility or between
generations labeled as inter-generational
mobility.
Intra-generational
mobility consists
of movement up and down the
stratification system by members of
a
single
generation (the-social class in which
you began life compared
with your social class at
the end of your
life).
Inter-generational
mobility consists
of movement up and down the
stratification system by members
of
successive
generations of a family (your
social class location
compared with that of your
parents, for
example).
Comparison is usually made
between social class status
of son and father.
Mobility
is functional. Open societies
provide opportunities to its
members for the development of
their
talents
and working toward their
individual fulfillment. At the same time
a person can select the
best
person
for doing a particular
job.
Mobility
determinants
Three
main factors that affect
mobility:
Structural
factors:
Structural
factors are the ones, which
determine the relative proportion of
high-status positions to be filled
and
the ease of getting them. Societies
differ in the relative proportion of
high- and low-status positions
to
be
filled. A society with a
primarily agricultural economy will
have many low-status and few
high-status
positions,
and mobility will be low.
The rate of mobility rises
with the degree of industrialization of
the
economy.
In an industrial society there is
expected to be an increase in the number of
occupations as well
as
in the number of jobs in each occupation. An
increase in the division of labor is
expected and along
with
it
there is increasing specialization,
hence the jobs
multiply.
As
the societies move from agricultural to
industrial and to post industrial
societies, there is a change in
the
nature
of jobs e.g. decline in manufacturing
jobs and an increase in
service jobs. Such a change
provides
new
opportunities for employment, which the
people avail and thereby the whole
process becomes
instrumental
to social mobility
Even
in a relatively open society, upward mobility is
not open equally to everyone.
Middle class children
typically
have learning experiences which
are more helpful in gaining upward
mobility than the
experiences
63
Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
of
lower-class children. Nevertheless,
mobility may further depend
upon the prevalent policies, laws
and
other
factors that may
discriminate between groups
and individuals on the basis of
factors like race,
gender,
religion,
age, and ethnicity.
Individual
factors:
While
structural factors may determine the
proportion of high-status, well-paid positions in a
society,
individual
factors greatly affect which
persons get them. It means
that one has to look
into the procedures
of
access and entry to the
available positions. There could be the possession of
the entry based
qualifications
by the individuals and there could be
number of individual factors that
influence the
possession
of necessary qualifications.
The
individuals may have
differences in their "mobility
oriented behaviors". There is much which
persons
can
do to increase their prospects
for upward mobility by improving
their educational qualifications.
The
work
habits learned in early
childhood are very important
for making efforts in improving
one's position.
Of
course hard work carries no
guarantee of upward mobility, but
not many achieve upward
mobility
without
it.
Then
there is the often referred "principle of
deferred gratification." This consists of
postponing
immediate
satisfaction in order to gain
some later goal. Saving
one's money to go for higher
studies or to
start
a business is an example. At the moment
you are studying sociology rather than
using the same time
for
having fun somewhere else.
You are postponing `having
fun' over studying the subject of
sociology. In
this
way you are practicing
"deferred-gratification" pattern of
behavior. The parents may
spend the money
on
the education of their child
and postpone the celebration of his
marriage. Mobility oriented people
are
likely
to demonstrate such pattern of behavior.
It is usually assumed that the
"deferred gratification"
principle
is followed by the middle class
people.
Gender
differential may be another factor as
part of individual differences. It is
generally observed
that
there
are greater opportunities
for males than for
females. Even if the two
persons possess the
same
qualifications
but being a male or a female
may influence one's climbing the
mobility ladder. Under the
law
such
a discriminatory approach may be
prohibited but in reality it may be
practiced in an invisible
way.
Such
a barrier is usually referred to as "Glass ceiling": a
concept used to explain how
women are prevented
from
attaining top (managerial
and professional) jobs. In UK 50% of
daughters of professional
and
managerial
households enter non-manual job
(intermediate level) with little chance
of work-life upward
mobility.
Differential
fertility by social
class:
The
number of suitable off-springs available to
fill the positions from the same
class is another factor
influencing
social mobility. The
inadequate number of children available
in the middle class to fill
jobs will
provide
an opportunity for the children
from the adjacent class to
fill the vacancies.
Interaction
of all factors: All of
the above factors interact and
have a cumulative effect on the mobility of
a
person.
Look at a person who is
poor, uneducated, and
belongs to a minority group is
handicapped on all
three
counts and all these
factors may interact and
make things worse for
him.
Costs:
While
social mobility permits
society to fill its occupational
vacancies with the most able
people and offers
the
individual a chance to attain his or
her life goal, it also
involves certain
costs.
A
mobile society arouses
expectations which are not
always fulfilled, thereby creating
dissatisfaction and
unhappiness.
One could come across lot
more frustrations in the mobile society
than in the traditional
society.
The
costs could include fear of
falling in status, as in downward
mobility; the strain of new
roles learning in
occupational
promotions, the disruption of primary
group relationships as a person moves
upward or
downward.
Parents and children may
become strangers because of
changes in social attitudes.
Mobility
oriented
parents may work hard,
come home late, and
have less interaction with
their children. It may
lead
to
bitterness and
estrangement.
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Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Social
mobility often demands
geographic mobility, with a
painful loss of treasured
social ties. An
offered
promotion
may be declined because of
fear of the burden of new
responsibilities. Even marriages
may be
threatened
when spouses are not
equally interested in mobility. It
can result in mental illness
and conflict.
General
observations:
·
Social
mobility, at least among
men, has been fairly
high. Comparative mobility between
men and
women
shows that men have
been more mobile than
women.
·
The
long-term trend in social
mobility has been upward.
With the shift toward
industrial economies
there
are prospects of enhanced
job opportunities resulting in greater
scope for upward
mobility.
·
Within
a single generation, social
mobility is generally incremental,
not dramatic. Most
young
families
increase their income over
time as they gain education and skills.
But with the exception of
few
drastically upward or downward mobility
cases, most social mobility
involves limited
movement
within one class level rather
than striking moves between
classes.
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