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Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

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Page 1: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of

Social Exclusion

John Hobcraft

University of York

Page 2: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

2006 vs 1976

• Birth cohorts– 1946 from 30 to 60– 1958 from 18 to 48– 1970 from 6 to 36

• Computing power• Statistical packages• Increased interdisciplinarity?• Multiple deprivation to Social exclusion• Real progress or more of same?• Heavy reliance on NCDS and BCS (plus BHPS)

Page 3: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

What is Social Exclusion?

• More than Poverty• Multiple Disadvantage/ Deprivation• Multiple Origins to Multiple Outcomes• Dynamic Perspective• Medium & Long-term focus• Outcomes become antecedents or constraints• Pervasive and specific antecedents

Page 4: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Intergenerational elements

• Limited parental characteristics– Income/ poverty; class; housing tenure;

education; employment status; mother’s malaise (BCS)

– Partnership breakdown; parental interest, etc

• Missing factors– Cognitive & behavioural measures; measured

genes or B-G design; personality traits (&CM); parenting styles

Page 5: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Intergenerational 2

• What do we know?– Strong and fairly specific continuities in class, housing

tenure, partnership breakdown, out-of-wedlock childbearing, malaise

– Strong and more pervasive influences of poverty, education, parental interest

– Strong links on behaviour and cognition, but little on whether specific or pervasive, though likely pervasive

– Nature-Nurture? – mainly psychology

Page 6: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Continuity and Change

• Continuities across Life-Course– Pervasive antecedents– Specific antecedents

• Continuity and Change– Who stays disadvantaged?– Who is newly disadvantaged?

• Gendered Pathways to Social Exclusion

Page 7: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Childhood antecedents

• Much new research• Broad range of pervasive childhood antecedents of

many adult disadvantages– Poverty, school absences, test scores, parental interest,

behaviour, family structure (incl care), health

• Some particularly strong specific influences– Aggression and anxiety to Malaise

– Child health to Limiting long-standing illness

Page 8: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Gender & Cohort (58 & 70)

• Gendered pathways– Few differences in strength of childhood antecedents by

gender

– Yet to find greater ‘legacy’ for males

– Females show some exacerbated response especially for low maternal interest, aggression, social housing

• Cross-cohort differences– Again remarkably little robust evidence of differences

in adult ‘response’ to childhood disadvantages

Page 9: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Late adolescence & Early adult

• Very strong links to later disadvantage (58)

• Very similar links to disadvantages at ages 23 and 33!

• Pervasive links for qualifications, unemployment, NEET, homelessness

• Specific links – Left home ‘friction’ to malaise and smoking

Page 10: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Gender and Early Parenthood

• Early parenthood per se:– No gender differences in odds ratios– But higher incidence for women

• Lone Motherhood shows consistent and large legacies

Page 11: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Continuities 23 to 33Status Incidence % Odds

Ratio

% Exit

23-33

% New

At 3323 33

Soc. Class 4/5 19 20 5.7

Social Housing 14 14 9.5

Benefits 14 17 3.8

Low Income 21 24 2.7

Malaise 10 9 11.7

Page 12: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Continuities 23 to 33Status Incidence % Odds

Ratio

% Exit

23-33

% New

At 3323 33

Soc. Class 4/5 19 20 5.7 52 54

Social Housing 14 14 9.5 52 52

Benefits 14 17 3.8 63 69

Low Income 21 24 2.7 60 65

Malaise 10 9 11.7 60 54

Page 13: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Continuity & change 23 to 33

• Almost no childhood antecedents distinguish new entrants from those who remain disadvantaged.

• ‘Stickiness’ of disadvantage 23-33 unexplained by antecedents– Unemployment 23-33:

• Same ‘effect size’ for men and women on benefits, low income and housing (but higher incidence for men)

– Divorce 23-33• Same strong ‘effects’ for men & women for social housing and

high malaise at 33• Very strong for women only on benefit receipt at 33• Strong both sexes on low income, but doubled for women

Page 14: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

A Caution on Intergenerational Mobility (Bowles et al, US)

Page 15: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

An NCDS example

• Father’s income at age 16 (ln) – badly measured• Male cohort members income at 33 (ln)• Simple regression gives ‘elasticity’ of 0.298• Exclude two ‘corner’ cells

– Both <0.5 median– Both top band or decile

• Elasticity now 0.056!• ‘Stickiness’ of high advantage or high

disadvantage for social class, income, etc may be important part of I-G ‘immobility’

Page 16: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Social Exclusion & Policy

• Consequences of SE perspective:– Dynamic

– Multi-faceted

– Long-term

– Active Policies

– Not deterministic

– Recognition of influences of BOTH choice & structure

• But still some inheritance from Keith Joseph– SEU’s ‘Breaking the Cycle’

Page 17: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

Diagram showing Hills 4 P’s

Prevention

Promotion

Propulsion

Threshold

or EventProtection

Page 18: Continuity and Change in the Generation(s) and Life-course of Social Exclusion John Hobcraft University of York

What of Legacies of Past?

• Differential Policies according to gender, antecedents and experiences:– Legacies from childhood (Differential Prevention)– ‘Scarring’ from early experiences (Differential

Prevention & Propulsion)– Vulnerability to return to disadvantage cf newly

disadvantaged (Differential Prevention, Propulsion, and Promotion)

– Gendered vulnerability (Differential prevention, Promotion & Propulsion)