The Downward Slide of Working-Class African American Men

G. Wilson, Vincent J. Roscigno
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Abstract The burgeoning sociological literature on African American/White men’s downward mobility has failed to examine dynamics at the working-class level and has not conducted analyses at the refined job level. Within the context of the minority vulnerability thesis, we address these shortcomings, and specifically utilizing data from the 2011–2015 waves of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we examine racial difference in the incidence, determinants, and timing of downward mobility from two working-class job types, elite blue collar and rank-and-file jobs. Findings our expectation of ongoing, contemporary vulnerability: from both working-class origins, African Americans relative to Whites experience higher rates of downward mobility, experience it on a broad basis that is not explained by traditional stratification-based causal factors (e.g., human capital and job/labor market characteristics) and experience downward mobility more quickly. Further, these racial inequalities are pronounced at the elite blue-collar level, probably because of heightened practices of social closure when supervisory responsibility is at stake. We conclude by discussing the implications of these findings for understanding both the ongoing and future socioeconomic well-being of African Americans in the US.
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非裔美国工人阶级男性地位的下滑
关于非裔美国人/白人男性向下流动的新兴社会学文献未能考察工人阶级层面的动态,也没有在精细工作层面进行分析。在少数群体脆弱性论文的背景下,我们解决了这些缺点,并特别利用2011-2015年收入动态小组研究的数据,我们研究了两种工人阶级工作类型(精英蓝领和普通工作)的发生率、决定因素和向下流动时间的种族差异。我们对持续的、当代的脆弱性的预期:无论是工人阶级出身的非洲裔美国人,相对于白人来说,都经历了更高的向下流动率,经历了一个广泛的基础,而不是传统的基于阶层的因果因素(例如,人力资本和工作/劳动力市场特征)所解释的,并且经历了更快的向下流动。此外,这些种族不平等现象在蓝领精英阶层尤为明显,这可能是因为当监管责任受到威胁时,社会封闭的做法会加剧。最后,我们讨论了这些发现对理解美国非裔美国人目前和未来社会经济福祉的影响。
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