Surname Method Rewrites Mobility Measures

Updated: 2023.08.04 2Y ago 1 sources
Following rare surnames across centuries can reveal social persistence that short‑term parent‑child correlations miss. Clark’s approach suggests commonly used mobility statistics (measured over a few generations) understate long‑run persistence of status. — If long‑run surname evidence is correct, policymakers and researchers must rethink how they measure mobility and what interventions can realistically alter intergenerational advantage.

Sources

The Son Also Rises (book) - Wikipedia
2023.08.04 100% relevant
Gregory Clark’s book and its use of university rolls, parliamentary lists and professional registers to track rare surnames across countries and centuries.
← Back to All Ideas