社会流动性
主观幸福感
英国家庭小组调查
生活满意度
心理学
面板数据
样品(材料)
纵向研究
不平等
收入动态的小组研究
社会阶层
纵向数据
透视图(图形)
人口经济学
社会心理学
社会学
经济
计量经济学
人口学
幸福
人工智能
社会科学
化学
数学分析
数学
统计
色谱法
计算机科学
市场经济
作者
Andreas Hadjar,Robin Samuel
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.rssm.2014.12.002
摘要
A main assumption of social production function theory is that status is a major determinant of subjective well-being (SWB). From the perspective of the dissociative hypothesis, however, upward social mobility may be linked to identity problems, distress, and reduced levels of SWB because upwardly mobile people lose their ties to their class of origin. In this paper, we examine whether or not one of these arguments holds. We employ the United Kingdom and Switzerland as case studies because both are linked to distinct notions regarding social inequality and upward mobility. Longitudinal multilevel analyses based on panel data (UK: BHPS, Switzerland: SHP) allow us to reconstruct individual trajectories of life satisfaction (as a cognitive component of SWB) along with events of intragenerational and intergenerational upward mobility—taking into account previous levels of life satisfaction, dynamic class membership, and well-studied determinants of SWB. Our results show some evidence for effects of social class and social mobility on well-being in the UK sample, while there are no such effects in the Swiss sample. The UK findings support the idea of dissociative effects in terms of a negative effect of intergenerational upward mobility on SWB.
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