Inequality and 21-year-olds' negotiation of uncertain transitions to employment: a Bourdieusian approach |
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Authors: | Joseph Borlagdan |
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Affiliation: | 1. Research and Policy Centre, Brotherhood of St Laurence, Fitzroy, VIC, Australia;2. School of Social and Political Studies, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia |
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Abstract: | Faced with uncertainty, how do young people navigate the transition from school to work? Applying Bourdieu's concept of habitus to the ‘fields’ of education and employment, I argue that past experience, family background and unequal access to economic, social and symbolic forms of capital differentiate their transitions. Drawing on the tenth wave of the Australian longitudinal Life Chances Study, we found that all of the twenty-five 21-year-olds interviewed expressed uncertainty when discussing their futures. However, those from high-income backgrounds with access to strong social, economic and cultural resources were better able to manage the risks arising from uncertainty than their counterparts from low-income backgrounds. The following article seeks to contribute to a more nuanced understanding of young people's experiences at age 21 through the application of Bourdieu's conceptual framework. The interviewees’ habitus and cultivation of varying forms of capital tend towards social reproduction, yet also reveal opportunities for those considered ‘disadvantaged’ to mobilise their cultural resources. Bourdieu's model of the field, and its component conceptual tools, provide an explanatory frame to make sense of the seemingly incoherent paths that young people trace between education and employment. |
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Keywords: | youth longitudinal Bourdieu capital habitus disadvantage inequality |
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