Scholarly Culture and Occupational Success in 31 Societies
Comparative Sociology, Forthcoming
36 Pages Posted: 4 Apr 2015
Date Written: April 3, 2015
Abstract
Prior research shows that coming from a book-oriented family is a great advantage for children’s education, especially for the "ordinary success" of children from disadvantaged families. Focusing on the next career stage, our multi-level analysis (58,944 respondents in 31 societies) shows that it furthers children's later occupational career even more than parents' education or occupation, especially in developing nations where there is a small additional advantage beyond the educational gains. This evidence supports the scholarly culture hypothesis that book-oriented socialization provides a “toolkit” of competencies, skills, and knowledge (Kohn, Spaeth). It is not consistent with elite closure/cultural capital theories that elites use cultural signals to recognize members and hoard advantages by discriminating on the basis of culture (Bourdieu, Goblot).
Keywords: occupational status, books, scholarly culture, cultural capital, development/modernization, Bourdieu, cross-national comparison, status attainment
JEL Classification: D63, I21, J24, J62, J71, O15, O57, Z10
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation