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Networking

Equal Opportunities International

ISSN: 0261-0159

Article publication date: 1 April 1985

26

Abstract

Volume 19 Number 3 of Sociology contains two articles of interest. In the first, entitled “Integrating Women into Class Theory”, Angela Dale, G. Nigel Gilbert and Sara Arber propose a theoretical framework by which women as well as men may be included in class theory, and a methodology is suggested by which one aspect of women's class location, their relationship to the labour market, may be measured. It is argued that social class in a Weberian sense may be seen as comprising two distinct although related dimensions. Firstly, that based upon relationship to the labour market, measured at the level of the individual; and second, that represented by patterns of consumption (in terms of goods and services), measured at the level of the family. All those with a direct relationship to the labour market may be allocated to an occupational class position, irrespective of position within the family. Data from the General Household Survey are used to produce a preliminary occupational class schema for women which does not depend upon assumptions of skill or the manual/non‐manual nature of the work.

Citation

(1985), "Networking", Equal Opportunities International, Vol. 4 No. 4, pp. 13-15. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb010435

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1985, MCB UP Limited

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