Social Stratification

 

Grusky, David (ed.), Social Stratification. Boulder: Westview Press.
Part II: Forms and Sources of Stratification, pp. 39-61. (Alternative)
Part III: The Structure of Modern Stratification, pp. 65-241. (Alternative)
Part IV: Generating Stratification, pp. 245-393. (Alternative)
Part V: The Consequences of Stratification, pp. 397-465. (Alternative)

Baron, James N. 1984. "Organizational Perspectives on Stratification." Annual Review of Sociology, 37-69.

Beck, E.M. et al. 1978. "Stratification in a Dual Economy: A Sectorial Model of Earning Determination." American Sociological Review 43: 704-20.

Bielby, William T. and James N. Baron. "Men and Women at Work: Sex Segregation and Statistical Discrimination." Pp. 606-632 in D. Grusky, Social Stratification.

Cain, Glen G. 1984. " The Challenge of Segmented Labor Market Theories to Orthodox Theory: A Survey." Journal of Economic Literature 14: 1215-57.

Coleman, James S. 1988. "Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital." American Journal of Sociology S95-S120.

DiMaggio, Paul. 1982. "Cultural Capital and School Success." American Sociological Review 47:189-201.

England, Paula, George Farkas, Barbara S. Kilbourne, and Thomas Dou. 1988. "Explaining Occupational Sex Segregation and Wages: Findings from a Model with Fixed Effects." American Sociological Review 53: 544-58.

Granovetter, Mark S. 1973. "The Strength of Weak Ties." American Journal of Sociology 78:1360-80.

Jacobs, Jerry. 1989. "Long-Term Trend in Occupational Segregation in Sex." American Journal of Sociology 95:160-75.

Laumann, Edward O. and Richard Senter. "Subjective Social Distance, Occupational Stratification, and Forms of Status and Class Consciousness." American Journal of Sociology 81: 1304-38.

Mayhew, Leon. "Ascription in Modern Societies." Sociological Inquiry 38. Reprinted in The Logic of Social Hierarchies, edited by E.O. Laumann, P.M. Siegel, and R.W. Hodge. Chicago: Markham Press, 1970, pp. 308-23.

Stolzenberg, Ross M. 1978. "Bringing the Boss Back In: Employer Size, Employee Schooling, and Socioeconomic Achievement." American Sociological Review 43: 813-28.