Session | ||
OS-163: Keynote Freeman Award: Per Block: "Networks of social positions"
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Session Abstract | ||
Network analysis is traditionally concerned with relations between people and their consequences; what sets network modelling apart is not the substantive topic, though, but an empirical and conceptual perspective. We embrace and analyse inter-dependence between different people and different ties, thereby shifting explanations from variables to social relations and structures. However, the analysis of interdependence is mostly confined to relatively small social systems, that is, complete social networks in some bounded context. In this presentation, I discuss how the conceptual focus on inter-dependence can be extended to larger systems by studying networks of social positions in which individuals or pairs of individuals constitute ties rather than nodes – for example, residents moving between neighbourhoods of a city span a “mobility network” between these neighbourhoods. Here, each move is embedded in the mobility of other people (i.e. dependent); one example of the consequence of such inter-dependence is described in the Schelling model of residential segregation. Focussing mostly on examples using labour market positions, in particular occupations, I propose that a wide range of insights can be gained from studying interdependence in such networks; these insights go beyond what can be learned from a traditional variable-based approach. I discuss networks in which occupations are connected by parent-child dyads, by siblings, by spouses, and by individuals over the life-course. The insights we can gain relate to themes classically studied by network researchers, such as social foci, social influence, or relational sociology, but also to broader socio-economic questions including inequality, social closure, and the inheritance of advantage. | ||
No contributions were assigned to this session. |