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Men’s mobility into management from blue collar and white collar jobs: Race differences across the early work-career
Institution:1. Pediatric cardiology, centre de référence des malformations cardiaques congénitales complexes-M3C, Necker hospital for sick children, Assistance publique des Hôpitaux de Paris, France;2. Adult Congenital Heart Disease Unit, Cardiology Department, Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou, Centre de référence des Malformations Cardiaques Congénitales Complexes, M3C, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Paris, France;3. Haute Ecole Paul Henri Spaak, I.S.E.K., Kinésithérapy Section, Bruxelles, Belgique;4. Pediatric cardiology, centre de référence des malformations cardiaques congénitales complexes-M3C, Necker hospital for sick children, Assistance publique des Hôpitaux de Paris, France, Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France
Abstract:Within the context of the “particularistic mobility thesis” we examine racial differences in the incidence, and determinants of, as well as timing to, mobility into management across the critical early career years at a refined level, namely, when groups share similar white collar and blue collar jobs. Findings from a Panel Study of Income Dynamics sample of men support theory and indicate that from both job levels a racial hierarchy exists: African Americans have the lowest rate of mobility, reach management through a route that is relatively formal and structured by a traditional range of stratification-based causal factors and take longest to reach management. Whites, in contrast, have the highest mobility rate, reach management through a relatively informal path that is less structured by traditional stratification-based factors, and reach management the quickest, and, across all three issues Latinos occupy an intermediate ground between African Americans and Latinos. Further, as predicted by theory, racial differences, particularly, relative to whites, are greater among those tracked from blue collar jobs than white collar jobs. Discussed are implications of the findings for understanding racial disadvantage in the American labor market across the work-career and on an inter-generational basis.
Keywords:Mobility  Race  Work-career  Jobs
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