Social Class in Modern Britain

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Routledge, 1989 - Social Science - 314 pages

The book incorporates three alternative conceptions of class. Erik Olin Wright's structural Marxist account is set alongside John Goldthorpe's occupational class schema, and the Registrar-General's prestige and skill-related categories. The authors use their unique data on inequality and conflict in contemporary Britain to provide, for the first time, a rigourous comparison of Marxist, sociological and official class frameworks. The book ranges widely across such topics as sectionalism in the workforce; privatism of families and individuals; fatalism; gender and class processes; sectoral production and consumption cleavages. The authors conclude that class is still crucial in structuring economic, political and social life.

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About the author (1989)

David Rose is Professor and Associate Director of the ESRC Research Centre on Micro-social Change (the British Household Panel Study) at the University of Essex.

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