2013
Aassve A., Arpino B. and Billari F. C., (2013), ‘Age norms on leaving home: Multilevel evidence from the European Social Survey’. Environment and Planning A, 45(2): 383 – 401.
Atkinson, T. and Brandolini, A. (2013). ‘On the identification of the middle class’, in Gornick, J. C. and Jantti, M. (Eds.). Income Inequality. Palo Alto, Stanford University Press, pp. 77-100.
Chan, T. W. and Boliver, V. (2013). ‘The grandparents effect in social mobility: Evidence from British Birth Cohort Studies’. American Sociological Review, 78(4). 662-678. Go to publication
Chan, T. W. and Boliver, V. (2013). ‘Social mobility over three generations in Finland: A critique.’ European Sociological Review (Forthcoming), DOI:10.1093/esr/jct012. Go to publication
Fisher, K. and Gershuny, J. (2013). Time Use and Time Diary Research. In Jeff Manza (ed). 2013. ‘Oxford Bibliographies in Sociology’. New York, New York USA: Oxford University Press.
Gallie D. (Ed.). (2013). ‘Economic crisis, quality of work, and social integration’. Oxford University Press.
Gallie D. (2013). ‘Direct participation and the quality of work’. Human Relations, 66(4):453-473.
Gallie, D. and Zhou, Y. (2013). ‘Job control and work stress’, in Gallie, D. (ed). Economic Crisis and the Quality of Work. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Gallie, D. and Zhou, Y. (2013). ‘Work organization and employee involvement in Europe’. Dublin: European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions.
Gash, V. (forthcoming) ‘Early careers and family formation in Great Britain’, book chapter in Barbieri P., Bozzon R. and Scherer S. (eds.) Atypical Employment and Welfare States. Edward Elgar.
Gershuny, J. and Sullivan, O. (forthcoming, 2013).‘All the housework of all the household’. Review of Economics of the Household (Invited article for special issue: ‘Economics of Time Use’)
Goldthorpe, J. H. (2013). ‘Understanding – and Misunderstanding – Social Mobility in Britain: The Entry of the Economists, the Confusion of Politicians and the Limits of Educational Policy’, Journal of Social Policy, 42: 431-450.
Henderson, M. (2013). ‘A test of parenting strategies’. Sociology, 47(3): 542-559. DOI: 10.1177/0038038512450103.
Heath, A. and Demireva, N. (2013). ‘Has multiculturalism failed in Britain?’. Ethnic and
Racial Studies. doi/10.1080/01419870.2013.80875
Heath, A., Sullivan, A., Boliver, V. and Zimdars, A. (2013). ‘Education under new labour, 1997-2010’. Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 29 (1): 227-247.
Kan, M. Y. and H. Laurie (forthcoming) ‘Changing patterns in the allocation of savings, investments and debts within couple relationships’. Sociological Review.
Kan, M. Y. (in press) ‘Household production and the labour market’. In G. Razzu (ed). Gender and the Labour Market in the UK. Oxford University Press.
Kan, M. Y. (2013) ‘Housework participation measurement’ In A. C. Michalos (ed). Encyclopaedia of Quality of Life Research. Springer.
Mandemakers, J. and Monden, C. (2013). ‘Does the effect of job loss on psychological distress differ by educational level?’ Work, Employment and Society, 27(1): 73-93.
Parameshwaran, M. (forthcoming, 2013). ‘Explaining intergenerational variation in English language acquisition and ethnic language attrition.’ Ethnic and Racial Studies.
Sullivan, O. and Gershuny, J. (2013) ‘Domestic outsourcing and multitasking: How much do they really contribute?’ Social Science Research, 42(5):1311-1324.
Sullivan, O. (forthcoming, 2013) ‘What do we learn about gender by separating housework from child care? Some considerations from time use evidence’ Journal of Family Theory and Review (Invited article for special issue: ‘Why study Housework?’)
2012
Barban, N. and Billari, F. C. (2012). ‘Classifying life course trajectories: a comparison of latent class and sequence analysis’. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series C (Applied Statistics), 61: 765–784. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9876.2012.01047.x
Bukodi, E. (2012) ‘The relationship between the work history and partnership formation in cohorts of British men born in 1958 and 1970’, Population Studies, DOI:10.1080/00324728.2012.656853.
Bukodi, E. and Goldthorpe, J. H. (2012). ‘Decomposing “Social Origins”: The Effects of Parents’ Class, Status, and Education on the Educational Attainment of Their Children’, European Sociological Review, doi: 10.1093/esr/jcs079.
Ermisch, J., Jantti, M. and Smeeding, T. (Eds). (2012). ‘From Parents to Children: The Intergenerational Transmission of Advantage’. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Gallie, D. (2012). ‘Skills, Job Control and the Quality of Work: The Evidence from Britain’. The Economic and Social Review, 43(3): 325-341.
Gallie, D., Felstead, A. and Green, F. (2012). ‘Job Preferences and the Intrinsic Quality of Work: The Changing Attitudes of British Employees 1992-2006’. Work, Employment and Society, 26(5): 806-821.
Gallie, D., Zhou, Y., Felstead, A. and Green, F. (2012). ‘Teamwork, Skill Development and Employee Welfare’. British Journal of Industrial Relations, 50 (1): 23-46.
Gershuny, J. I. & Kan, M. Y. (2012) ‘Half-way to Gender Equality in Work? Evidence from the Multinational Time Use Study’. In J. Scott (ed). Gendered Lives. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Pp. 74-94.
Halldén, K., Gallie, D. and Zhou, Y. (2012). ‘The Skills and Autonomy of Female Part-Time Work in Britain and Sweden’, Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, 30 (2): 187-201. Go to publication
Janus, A. L. 2012. ‘The Gap Between Mothers’ Work-Family Orientations and Employment Trajectories in 18 OECD Countries’. European Sociological Review (Forthcoming) DOI:10.1093/esr/jcs055. Go to publication
Jackson, M., Jonsson, J. O. and Rudolphi, F. (2012). ‘Ethnic inequality in choice-driven education systems: A longitudinal study of performance and choice in England and Sweden’. Sociology of Education, 85: 158-178.
Mencarini, L. and Sironi, M. (2012). ‘Happiness, housework and gender inequality in Europe’. European Sociological Review, 28(2), 203–219.
Muttarak, R., Hamill, H. Heath, A. and McCrudden, C. ‘Does Affirmative Action Work? Evidence from the Operation of Fair Employment Legislation in Northern Ireland’. Sociology, first published on October 2, 2012 doi:10.1177/0038038512453799. Go to publication
Pellizzari, M. and Billari F. C., (2012).‘The younger, the better? Age-related differences in academic performance at university’. Journal of Population Economics, 25(2), 697-739.
Peri-Rotem, N. (2012). ‘Statistics of Identity: Representation of Minority Groups in the Population Census.’ St Antony’s International Review, 8(1), 106-117. Go to publication
2011
Boliver, V. (2011). ‘Expansion, differentiation, and the persistence of social class inequalities in British higher education’. Higher Education, 61(3): 229-242. Abstract
Boliver, V. (2011). ‘Maximally maintained inequality and effectively maintained inequality in education: operationalizing the expansion-inequality relationship.’ Sociology Working Paper Series, Oxford University
Boliver, V. & Swift, A. (2011). ‘Do comprehensive schools reduce social mobility?’ The British Journal of Sociology, 62(1): 89-110.
Bukodi, E., Dex, S. and Goldthorpe, J.H. (2011). ‘The Conceptualisation and Measurement of Occupational Hierarchies: A Review, a Proposal and some Illustrative Analyses’, Quality and Quantity, vol. 45: 623-39.
Bukodi, E. & Goldthorpe, J.H. (2011). ‘Class Origins, Education and Occupational Attainment in Britain: Secular Trends or Cohort Specific Effects?’. European Societies, 13: 345-73.
Chan, T. W., Birkelund, G. E., Aas, A. K. and Wiborg, Ø. (2011). ‘Social Status in Norway.’ European Sociological Review, 27:451-468. Go to publication
Cooke, L. P. (2011). Gender-Class Equality in Political Economies. Perspectives on Gender series. New York & London: Routledge.
Demireva,N. (2011). ‘New Migrants in the UK: Employment Patterns and Occupational Attainment’. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 37 (4): 637-655
Demireva,N. and Kesler, C. (2011). ‘The Curse of Inopportune Transitions: the Labour Market Behaviour of Immigrants and Natives in the UK’. International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 52 (4): 306-326
Fisher, K. and Robinson, J. P. (2011). Daily Life in 23 Countries. Social Indicators Research 101(2), 295-304.
Gallie, D. and Zhou, Y. (2011). ‘The Changing Job Skills of Female Part-time Workers in Britain 1992–2006’. Human Resource Management Journal, 21 (1): 28-44.
Gershuny, J. (2011). ‘Increasing Paid Work Time? A New Puzzle for Multinational Time-Diary Research’. Social Indicators Research 101(2), 207-213. Go to publication
Horvat P. & Evans G. (2011). ‘Age, inequality and reactions to marketization in post-communist Central and Eastern Europe’. European Sociological Review, 27: 708-727. Go to publication
Jonsson, J. O. and Rudolphi, F. (2011). ‘Weak performance – strong determination. School achievement and educational choice among ethnic minority students in Sweden.’ European Sociological Review 27:487-508. (Advance access 2010: DOI 10.1093/ESR/jcq021.)
Kan, M. Y., Sullivan, O. and Gershuny, J. (2011). ‘Gender convergence in domestic work: Discerning the effect of interactional and institutional barriers from large-scale data’ Sociology 45 (2): 234 - 251.
Lesnard, L. and Kan, M. Y. (2011). ‘Investigating Scheduling of Work: a Two-Stage Optimal Matching Analysis of Workdays and Workweeks.’ Journal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A 174(2), 349-368. Go to publication
Sullivan, O. (2011). ’An end to gender deviance neutralization through housework? A review and reassessment of the quantitative literature using insights from the qualitative literature’ Journal of Family Theory and Review 3 (1): 1-13. Go to publication
Sullivan, O. (2011). ‘Gender deviance neutralization through housework - where does it fit in the bigger picture?: Response to England, Kluwer and Risman’ Journal of Family Theory and Review 3 (1): 27-31.
2010
Bukodi, E. and Goldthorpe, J.H. (2010). ‘Market versus Meritocracy: Hungary as a Critical Case’. European Sociological Review, 26(6): 655-74. Abstract This paper has been awarded the Polanyi Prize of the Hungarian Sociological Association
Chan, T. W. (2010). Social Status and Cultural Consumption. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Cooke, L. P. (2010). ‘The Politics of Housework’, pp 59 – 78 in Dividing the Domestic: Men, Women, and Household Work in Cross-National Perspective, edited by Judith Treas and Sonja Drobnič. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press Series on Social Inequality.
Cooke, L. P and Vanessa G. (2010). ‘Wives’ Part-time Employment and Marital Stability in Great Britain, West Germany, and the United States’. Sociology 44 (6). Abstract
Dieckhoff, M. and Steiber, N. (2010). ‘A Re-Assessment of Common Theoretical Approaches to Explain Gender Differences in Continuing Training Participation’. British Journal of Industrial Relations. Early view, article published online 16 November 2010 (DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8543.2010.00824.x). Abstract
Ermisch, J. and Gambetta, D. (2010). ‘Do Strong Family Ties Inhibit Trust?’ Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, Vol. 75, pp. 365–376.
Felstead, A., Gallie, D., Green, F. and Zhou, Y. (2010). ‘Employee Involvement, the Quality of Training and the Learning Environment: an Individual Level Analysis’. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 21 (10): 1667-1688.
Gash, V., Mertens, A. and Romeu-Gordo, L. (2010). ‘Women Between Part-time Work and Full-time Work: The Influence of Changing Hours of Work on Happiness and Life-Satisfaction’, SOEP papers on Multidisciplinary Panel Data Research, Paper 268, Berlin: DIW. 2/2010.
Goldthorpe, J. H. (2010). ‘Analysing Social Inequality: A Critique of Two Recent Contributions from Economics and Epidemiology’ European Sociological Review, 26(6):731-44. Abstract
Jackson, M. (2010). ‘Investigating Inequalities in Educational Attainment’, in J. Stillwell, P. Norman, C. Thomas. and P. Surridge. (eds.) Spatial and Social Disparities Understanding Population Trends and Processes Volume 2. Springer, Dordrecht.
Jonsson, J. O. (2010). ‘Child Well-Being and Intergenerational Inequality.’ Editorial, Child Indicators Research 3:1-10.
Jonsson, J. O. and Östberg, V. (2010). ‘Studying Young People’s Level of Living: The Swedish Child-LNU.’ Child Indicators Research 3:47-64.
Kan, M. Y. & Gershuny, J. I. (2010) ’Gender Segregation and Bargaining in Domestic Labour: Evidence from longitudinal time use data’. In R. Crompton, J. Scott, & C. Lyonnette (eds) Gender Inequalities in the 21st Century. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Pp. 153-173.
Katz-Gerro, T. and Sullivan, O. (2010). ’Voracious cultural consumption: the intertwining of class and gender’ Time & Society 19/2 (special issue on Gender and Time), 193-219. Go to publication
Sironi, M. (2010). ‘A century of transitions to adulthood in Europe: A comparative analysis’. VDM Publishing.
Sullivan, O. (2010). ‘Changing differences by educational attainment in fathers’ domestic labour and child care’ Sociology 44/4, 716–733. Go to publication
Tieben, N., de Graaf, P.M. and de Graaf, N. D. (2010). ‘Changing Effects of Family Background on Transitions to Secondary Education in the Netherlands: Consequences of Educational Expansion and Reform’. Research in Social Stratification and Mobility. 28: 77-90. Go to publication
2009
Cooke, L. P. (2009). ‘Gender Equity and Fertility in Italy and Spain’. Journal of Social Policy 38(1): 123-140. Abstract
Cox, D.R., Jackson, M. and Lu, S. (2009). ‘On Square Ordinal Contingency Tables: A Comparison of Social Class and Income Mobility for the Same Individuals’, Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A (Statistics in Society), 172(2):483-493. Abstract
Erikson, R. and Goldthorpe, J. H. (2009). ‘Social Class, Family Background and Intergenerational Mobility: A Comment on McIntosh and Munk’, European Economic Review, 53, 118-20. Abstract
Erikson, R. and Goldthorpe, J. H. (2009). ‘Has Social Mobility in Britain Decreased? Reconciling Divergent Findings on Income and Class Mobility’. British Journal of Sociology, 61, 211-30. Abstract
Gallie, D. and Russell, H. (2009). ‘Work-Family Conflict and Working Conditions in Western Europe’, Social Indicators Research, Volume 93, Number 3 / September, 2009 Abstract Go to publication
Gash, V. (2009). ‘Sacrificing their Careers for their Families? An Analysis of the Family Pay Penalty in Europe’, Social Indicators Research – Special Issue. September 2009, 93(3):569-586. Abstract Go to publication
Jackson, M. (2009). ‘Disadvantaged through Discrimination. The Role of Employers in Social Stratification’, British Journal of Sociology, 60, 4, 669-692. Abstract
Ogg, T., Zimdars, A., and Heath, A. (2009). ‘Schooling effects on degree performance: a comparison of the predictive validity of aptitude testing and secondary school grades at Oxford University’. British Educational Research Journal, 35(5):781 – 807. Abstract
Rothon, C., A Heath and L Lessard-Phillips (2009). ‘The Educational Attainments of the “Second Generation”: A Comparative Study of Britain, Canada and the US’. Teachers College Record, 111 (6): 1404-43. Abstract
Steiber, N. (2009). ‘Reported Levels of Time-based and Strain-based Conflict Between Work and Family Roles in Europe: A Multilevel Approach’. Social Indicators Research 93 (3): 469-488. Abstract
Sullivan, O., Coltrane, S., McAnnally, L. and Altintas, E. (2009).‘Father-friendly policies and time use data in a cross-national context: potential and prospects for future research’ Annals of The American Academy for Political and Social Science 624, 234-254
Zimdars, A., Sullivan, A. and Heath, A. (2009). ‘Elite higher education admissions in the arts and sciences: is cultural capital the key?’ Sociology, 43: 648-66. Abstract
2008
Goldthorpe, J.H. and Jackson, M. (2008). ‘Problems of an Education-Based Meritocracy’, in A. Lareau and D. Conley (eds.), Social Class. How Does it Work? Russell Sage Foundation Press.
Goldthorpe, J. H. and Mills, C. (2008). ‘Trends in Intergenerational Class Mobility in Modern Britain: Evidence from National Surveys, 1972-2005’. National Institute Economic Review, July, 83-100. Abstract
Heath, A.F., Rothon, C., and Kilpi, E. (2008). ‘The second generation in Western Europe: education, unemployment and occupational attainment’ Annual Review of Sociology 34: 211-35. Abstract
Jackson, M., Luijkx, R., Pollak, R., Vallet, L.-A. and Van de Werfhorst, H. (2008). ‘Educational Fields of Study and the Intergenerational Mobility Process in Comparative Perspective’, International Journal of Comparative Sociology, 49, 4-5, pp. 369-388. Abstract
Schneider, S. L. (2008). (Ed.) ‘The International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED-97). An Evaluation of Content and Criterion Validity for 15 European Countries’. Mannheim: MZES. Go to publication
2007
Cooke, L. P. (2007). ‘Persistent Policy Effects on Gender Equity in the Home: The Division of Domestic Tasks in Reunified Germany’. Journal of Marriage and Family 69 (November 2007): 930-950. Abstract
Dieckhoff, M., Jungblut, J. M. and O?Connell P. J. (2007). ‘Job-Related Training in Europe: Do Institutions Matter?’, in: D. Gallie (ed.), Employment Regimes and the Quality of Work, Oxford University Press, S. 77-103.
Gallie, D. (2007). (Ed.) ‘Employment Regimes and the Quality of Work’, Oxford: Oxford University Press Go to publication
Goldthorpe, J.H. and Jackson, M. (2007). ‘Intergenerational Class Mobility in Contemporary Britain: Political Concerns and Empirical Findings’, British Journal of Sociology, 58, 4, pp. 525-546. Abstract
Heath, A.F. and Brinbaum, Y. (2007). ‘Explaining ethnic inequalities in educational attainment’, Ethnicities 7: 291-305.
Jackson, M. (2007). ‘How Far Merit Selection? Social Stratification and the Labour Market’, British Journal of Sociology, 58(3):367-390. Abstract
Jackson, M., Erikson, R., Goldthorpe, J.H. and Yaish, M. (2007). ‘Primary and Secondary Effects in Class Differentials in Educational Attainment: the Transition to A-Level Courses in England and Wales’, Acta Sociologica, 50, 3, pp. 211-229. Abstract
Kan, M. Y. (2007). ‘Work Orientation and Wives’ Employment Careers: an evaluation of Hakim’s preference theory’. Work and Occupations, 34(4), pp.430-462.
Scherer, S. and Steiber, N. (2007). ‘Work and Family in Conflict? The Impact of Work Demands on Family Life in Six European Countries’. In Gallie, D. (ed.); Employment Regimes and the Quality of Work, Oxford University Press, pp. 137-78.