Many Gaelic speakers died in the Great Famine of the 1840s, and Gaelic was replaced by English, which was needed to achieve social mobility. |
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One of America's traditional selling points is the possibility of social mobility. |
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This is the story of a sort of social mobility from cook to camp commandant. |
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Capitalism, after all, is meant to be a fluid system allowing for social mobility. |
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The most egalitarian societies are also those with the highest level of social mobility. |
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The result of this analysis indicated that the patterns of social mobility were almost identical for all three religious denominations. |
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In their attempt to adopt the norm of this group, they manifest their aspirations of upward social mobility, but they overshoot the mark. |
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The middle class is large and for its members, upward or downward social mobility is rather easy. |
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The Swedes have a lavish welfare state married to a healthy economy and the best social mobility in the world. |
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All the evidence shows, that if you want to promote social mobility and equality of opportunity, you have to start early. |
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Both setting and hero visualize and glamorize a modernity of sophistication, leisure, social mobility, and consumption. |
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Perhaps the most remarkable finding thus far is the fact that these social mobility patterns were the same for all religious denominations. |
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Until recently, social mobility of members of the various religious denominations has hardly received any attention. |
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Under New Labour, not only has inequality of income increased, social mobility has actually decreased. |
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The level of social mobility is often used as an indicator of societal openness. |
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That is, there would have to be the possibility of both upward and downward social mobility. |
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Even before the price rise, there had been opportunities for upward social mobility. |
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A major source of debate is the issue of social mobility for people of different social origins. |
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Thirdly, they have been extensively used in cross-national comparisons of social mobility. |
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When there is no cash, there is no social mobility and therefore no threat to the status quo. |
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One fairly crude estimation of social mobility can be arrived at by comparing social class of origin with that of destination. |
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Compared with their parents who did not have the opportunity to study, they make a spectacular step up the social mobility ladder. |
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The opposition need to get real on the issue of social mobility. |
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What these beneficiaries of social mobility urged on contentious workers was pious resignation, and in no city did they sermonize more harshly than in Rouen. |
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Universities were purged of secular elements and the criteria for social mobility became the ability to demonstrate loyalty to the ideals of the new regime. |
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His rise from working-class obscurity to king's righthand man has always fascinated historians as an exemplar of ruthless Tudor social mobility. |
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There is absolutely no question of social mobility, one of the characteristics of a true democracy. |
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This massive underemployment completely distorts the distribution of incomes and considerably reduces social mobility and social advancement. |
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There was room to expand consumption with increased social mobility and rises in income. |
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In the public mind, higher education is still frequently associated solely with upward social mobility for individuals. |
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For society as a whole, learning is the key to enhanced equality of opportunity, increased social mobility, and greater social cohesion. |
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Economic welfare and greater upward social mobility are the key to a successful migration policy. |
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All of this has cast serious doubt on the old notion of education as the main route to social mobility. |
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Societies are, and should be, concerned with social mobility across generations. |
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Considered as a factor of upward social mobility by the majority of Tunisians, it doesn't seem to play this role anymore. |
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The two sections of society most damaged by the growing paralysis in social mobility are the lower middle class and the underclass at the bottom of the heap. |
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The multiversity has said it would provide economic development, social and medical healing, truth, beauty, and, for the young, freedom and social mobility. |
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But prizefighting was not, in fact, a major avenue of social mobility. |
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But her model for meritocratic social mobility was predicated upon the value of cutthroat individualism. |
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Though the absolute level of social mobility has grown, there has been no change in the relative mobility rates between the middle and working classes. |
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In this American dream, we move where the jobs are to realize social mobility. |
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But as a model of economic fairness, or of the role of universities in social mobility, it is unsatisfying. |
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As for social mobility, Tocqueville wrote at a time when American industry was in its infancy. |
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Given our growing social calcification, the need to boost growth and social mobility is great. |
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There is less social mobility in the UK than there was thirty years ago. |
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The system was stratified, but social mobility was possible. |
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In 2015, a study by Lahtinen and Wass suggested that low social mobility reduces turnout among lower classes. |
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Socially, economic dynamism opened up one of the avenues of social mobility in the Roman Empire. |
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The population is characterized by great social mobility. |
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Whereas in the past, women tended to join their husbands under family reunification policies, many immigrant women are now successfully developing strategies for social mobility. |
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Family disruption undermines social mobility. |
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Carney said that ultra loose monetary in the UK had helped to prevent a lost generation of long-term unemployed, and improved long-term social mobility prospects. |
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It encompassed, among other traits, increased religious tolerance, an affinity for political liberty and representative government, social mobility, and a tough individualism. |
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A certain amount of social mobility is implied by regulations detailing the conditions under which a ceorl could become a thegn. |
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The more entrepreneurial of these migrants would strive to leave these enclaves and were usually the ones who achieved social mobility. |
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These dialects are confined to rural areas and are spoken primarily by small numbers of people with low social mobility. |
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According to PBS, a thriving middle class held the promise of prosperity and social mobility. |
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The petite bourgeoisie consists of people who have experienced a brief ascension in social mobility for one or two generations. |
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Also, social mobility is lower in countries with high inequality, such as Italy, the United Kingdom and the United States, and higher in the Nordic countries where income is distributed more evenly. |
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Low incomes and poverty are risk factors for divorce as is a very rapid upward social mobility where the acquisition of money and status is a prime mover. |
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The rise of provincial men to the senatorial and equestrian orders is an aspect of social mobility in the first three centuries of the Empire. |
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Such individuals, while exceptional, are indicative of the upward social mobility possible in the Empire. |
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The American Dream, or the perception that Americans enjoy high social mobility, plays a key role in attracting immigrants. |
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In today's societies, where knowledge and the processing of information are increasingly the means of social mobility and economic progress, learning throughout life is the norm, and literacy is a key to doing so. |
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Education provides an indication in most contexts of social mobility, but also of democratic participation and the quality of the public sphere more broadly. |
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Benefits for citizens and society would accrue from offering improved chances of social mobility to the low skilled by preparing people to progress into different professions with new opportunities. |
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A serious effort there would pay dividends for social mobility. |
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Improved internal promotion and job mobility: we do all we can to encourage upward social mobility, planning ahead and satisfying people's aspirations for geographical and job mobility. |
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This allowed for a certain degree of social mobility as an astute free client could increase his wealth until he could afford clients of his own, thus becoming a lord. |
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In 2011, Lloyds Banking Group established the Lloyds Scholars Programme, a social mobility programme aimed at UK students, in partnership with nine leading UK universities. |
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And is it really true that comprehensive schools are worse for social mobility than the selective grammar and secondary modern schools they have largely replaced? |
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In daily life, there were many intermediate positions in the overall social structure and it is believed that there must have been some social mobility. |
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This system of clientship enabled social mobility as a client could increase his wealth until he could afford clients of his own, thus becoming a lord. |
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However, the emphasis on the construction of heavy industry provided full employment and social mobility through the recruitment of young rural workers and women. |
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They also support what they see as greater fairness and social mobility. |
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