Scaling the socioeconomic ladder: Low-income women's perceptions of class status and opportunity

被引:64
作者
Bullock, HE [1 ]
Limbert, WM [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Dept Psychol, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1046/j.0022-4537.2003.00085.x
中图分类号
D58 [社会生活与社会问题]; C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号
摘要
This study examined how 69 low-income women enrolled in an educational training program perceived social class and upward mobility. Participants identified their social class during childhood, their current status, and their anticipated post graduate status. Beliefs about income inequality and attributions for wealth and poverty were also assessed. Respondents expected to achieve middle class status and perceived higher education as a route to upward mobility, although the accessibility of post-secondary programs was questioned. Consistent with previous research involving low-income groups (Bullock, 1999; Kluegel & Smith, 1986), structural attributions for poverty and wealth were favored over individualistic causes. Also, respondents perceived income inequality as unjust. The construction of class identity and implications for class-based mobilization are discussed. It [the American dream] means the opportunity to go as far in life as your abilities will take you. Anyone in America can aspire to be a doctor a teacher a police officer or even, as Oprah said, a President. But you can't get any of those important jobs if you don't have the opportunity to acquire the skills you need.... And that's why I believe that the key to the American Dream is education. -Former President George Herbert Walker Bush, 1997.
引用
收藏
页码:693 / 709
页数:17
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]   Relationship of subjective and objective social status with psychological and physiological functioning: Preliminary data in healthy white women [J].
Adler, NE ;
Epel, ES ;
Castellazzo, G ;
Ickovics, JR .
HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2000, 19 (06) :586-592
[2]  
[Anonymous], RACE CLASS GENDER US
[3]  
[Anonymous], BELIEFS INEQUALITY
[5]  
Bourdieu P., 1987, Berkeley Journal of Sociology, V32, P1, DOI DOI 10.1177/1078087407313581
[6]   Attributions for poverty: A comparison of middle-class and welfare recipient attitudes [J].
Bullock, HE .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 29 (10) :2059-2082
[7]  
BULLOCK HE, IN PRESS J POVERTY
[8]  
BUSH GW, 1997, REMARKS PRESIDENTS S
[9]   How welfare reform is affecting women's work [J].
Corcoran, M ;
Danziger, SK ;
Kalil, A ;
Seefeldt, KS .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF SOCIOLOGY, 2000, 26 :241-269
[10]   Attitudes toward the poor and attributions for poverty [J].
Cozzarelli, C ;
Wilkinson, AV ;
Tagler, MJ .
JOURNAL OF SOCIAL ISSUES, 2001, 57 (02) :207-227