Always wanted to have gini coefficients and other inequality statistics of different sources in one dataset? Here you are. The Integrated Inequality Data, from WIID, Worldbank, LIS, and SWIID. osf.io/5cguq/overview
Always wanted to have gini coefficients and other inequality statistics of different sources in one dataset? Here you are. The Integrated Inequality Data, from WIID, Worldbank, LIS, and SWIID. osf.io/5cguq/overview
1/ Does growing up poor always lead to political apathy?
Very happy to share my first paper published (open access) in @electoralstudies.bsky.social, where I show that parents' influence mitigates the poverty gap in participation, while economic mobility does not.
π shorturl.at/p5Bac
Front cover of The Division of Rationalized Labor. The cover includes four pictures: pen and paper, microscope, factory tower, police badge. Modern-looking yellow lines and graphs are superimposed.
My new book, The Division of Rationalized Labor, is now shipping! A brief summary of the argument to followβ¦
The rise of stratification research in sociology, economics, and political science. My new blog. With a conclusion that European universities should rather sponsor inequality centers than to dismantle them. @eui-eu.bsky.social @eui-sps.bsky.social hermwerf.substack.com/p/the-rise-o...
Billions of πͺπΊ money flow into regional development.
But do citizens trust the EU more in return?
π¬ Find out in this Electoral Studies article with Paul Maneuvrier-Hervieu and Anne-Marie Jeannet.
βSpoiler: EU πΆ regional funds do build trust in the πͺπΊ , especially among working-class citizens.
New Open Access paper published in PNAS Nexus! βIngroup preferences, segregation, and intergroup contact in neighborhoods and civic organizationsβ with my co-authors Rob Franken, @dingemanwiertz.bsky.social, and Jochem Tolsma. doi.org/10.1093/pnas... Thread below.
Happy to see this work in The British Journal of Sociology (@bjsociology.bsky.social)! Hope it sparks discussion on how social mobility interacts with democratic participation and what this means for representation and social inclusion.
Using panel data from eight UK General Elections, we examined how occupational class mobility shapes the intergenerational transmission of electoral participation. The patterns we found suggests reinforcement of existing class inequalities in political engagement.
We found that upwardly mobile individuals are more likely to voteβbut only after moving into the middle class. πMeanwhile, those who experience downwardly mobility (increasingly common today) show lower turnout even before their occupational change, reflecting self-selection.π
Class-based gaps in voter turnout and political representation in Britain are likely to widen further. Our study, with Nan Dirk de Graaf and Geoff Evans (@nuffieldcollege.bsky.social), reveals how social mobility creates a cycle that reinforces democratic inequalities. π³οΈπͺ
In countries where income inequality is high, those who feel privileged are often more supportive of redistribution.
If youβd like to go deeper, the full article - with @leoazzollini.bsky.social (@csisunitn.bsky.social - is published in Open Access in @ssreditorial.bsky.social).
@sociologyoxford.bsky.social @ox.ac.uk
Why do people with similar jobs or classes see inequality so differently? My new piece in @theconversation.com explains why where you think you stand in society is key.
Nice opportunity. Deadline closing soon.
TN-Square 6th Edition, Trento School of Applied Quantitative Research, 22-24 October 2025, Trento
Employment and Mobility over the life course in changing societies
Available Open Access.
@sociologyoxford.bsky.social @ox.ac.uk @ess-survey.bsky.social @trinityoxford.bsky.social
New paper in Quality & Quantity, just in time for your summer methodological reading! With @giorgiodolci.bsky.social, we validate the measurement of populist attitudes in the @ess-survey.bsky.social. Because nothing says 'break' like Structural Equation Modelling and Measurement Invariance.
Check this out!
Image of Giacomo Melli with quote: "Globally, these results reinforce the relevance of subjective social status as a central predictor of socio-political outcomes. By showing that contextual structural inequality moderates these relationships, these results reaffirm the sociological perspective of individuals as agents embedded in different social structures."
π§ A paper by DPhil student Giacomo Melli highlights the power of subjective social status in shaping attitudes to wealth redistribution.
But context matters: in more unequal societies, support for redistribution is less divided by perceived status.
πβ‘οΈ www.sociology.ox.ac.uk/article/stud...
1-year opportunity for a Departmental Lecturer in Sociology at @sociologyoxford.bsky.social for the academic year 25/26. This position has a focus on life course research and quant methods. Apply by 27/6. tinyurl.com/2tydswwj
Should the government ποΈ fight economic inequality?
You probably have a strong take. But why do you believe that? π Spoilers from our new Social Science Research paper with Giacomo Melli: it depends jointly on where you think you stand in societyπͺ and how unequal your surroundings actually are!
Full Open Access here.
@sociologyoxford.bsky.social
@trinityoxford.bsky.social
@ox.ac.uk
This all started as a master's thesis with @stefanischerer.bsky.social (@csisunitn.bsky.social) and Geoff Evans (@nuffieldcollege.bsky.social), and turned into something much bigger.
Big thanks to @leoazzollini.bsky.social, from whom I learned a lot, and to everyone who helped along the way.
What this shows: how we feel about our place in society matters for politics, sometimes as much as where we are.
Context matters too. In countries with high inequality, even people who feel they're near the top start supporting redistribution. Self-perception meets structural conditions.π
People who feel lower in the social hierarchy tend to support redistribution more, even when their social class says otherwise. Subjective status matters on its own. π
What happens when we look at support for redistribution through the lens of how people feel about their place in society? π My new article in Social Science Research with Leo Azzollini (@leoazzollini.bsky.social) explores this in 25 countries, 1987-2019. π
@ssreditorial.bsky.social
π³οΈ Populism is a warning sign.
English local elections show it again: People feel abandoned & look scapegoats.
Drawing on own research & others, I argue ππ½
π‘ To counter populism: We need to reinvest in citizens, e.g. housing, health & dignity.
Short π§΅
π www.socialeurope.eu/to-counter-p...
That blinking cursor. The empty page. The weight of what should be written.
Every writer, academic, student knows this feeling.
I unpack the fear of the blank page & share practical tips for moving past it.
π§΅
π catherineeunicedevries.substack.com/p/meeting-th...
Today!