Fascinating. Shows where Scandinavians, Germans, French, Italians and British moved to the US and where most income inequality and mobilitypic.twitter.com/8qugOfM557
Voit lisätä twiitteihisi sijainnin, esimerkiksi kaupungin tai tarkemman paikan, verkosta ja kolmannen osapuolen sovellusten kautta. Halutessasi voit poistaa twiittisi sijaintihistorian myöhemmin. Lue lisää
Fascinating. Shows where Scandinavians, Germans, French, Italians and British moved to the US and where most income inequality and mobilitypic.twitter.com/8qugOfM557
Clearly, intergenerational mobility also depends on (structures of) inequality. Indeed high mobility is compatible with high inequality. So, do the "synthetic" data show that cultural attitudes to mobility drive mobility more than structural constraints?
@jackzillaUSA (weak) evidence for causal effect of a (weak) measurement of culture on outcomes
i don't really see how this is relevant to segregation and discrimination in the US seeing as these demographics came to the US freely but cultural norms and expectations, especially those enshrined in law by those earlier generations, have effects that persist over time
Twitter saattaa olla ruuhkautunut tai ongelma on muuten hetkellinen. Yritä uudelleen tai käy Twitterin tilasivulla saadaksesi lisätietoja.