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The Stratification Beliefs of English and American Adolescents

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  • Stern, Alan J.
  • Searing, Donald D.

Abstract

Tocqueville described the eventual progress of equality as inevitable; today its prospects seem less assured. The main engines of equality's modest advance are to be found in contemporary welfare states, where politics concerns who gets what and why. Governments are deeply concerned with these matters even when beguiling themselves, as well as the rest of us, into overlooking the cumulative results of their actions. By shoring up and gradually reshaping stratification systems, they help provide frameworks within which we live and plan our futures. Ordinary citizens are more attuned to the facts of inequality than to speculations about its origins. This essay investigates when and how citizens learn about stratification in England and the United States.

Suggested Citation

  • Stern, Alan J. & Searing, Donald D., 1976. "The Stratification Beliefs of English and American Adolescents," British Journal of Political Science, Cambridge University Press, vol. 6(2), pages 177-201, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:bjposi:v:6:y:1976:i:02:p:177-201_00
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