@hobcraftContinuityChangePathways2003
Continuity and Change in Pathways to Young Adult Disadvantage: Results from a British Birth Cohort
(2003) - John Hobcraft
Journal: Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion
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Tags:: #paper #NCDS #Transition #school-to-work #SequenceAnalysis
Cite Key:: [@hobcraftContinuityChangePathways2003]
Abstract
This paper focuses on pathways to adult disadvantage (or social exclusion) up to age 33 for a cohort of children born in Great Britain in March 1958. A sequence of interrelated analyses that build up a life-course account of the pathways involved in the origins of adult social exclusion are explored.
Notes
“We find fairly compelling evidence that the effects of childhood disadvantage are more powerful for women than for men: pathways to social exclusion are gendered.” (Hobcraft, 2003, pp. -1)