ESeC – References

Bakker, B. and Jol, C. (1997) ‘Socio-economic status: the choice between reference persons’, Netherlands Official Statistics, Summer 1997, 48-55.

Beck, U. (2000) What is Globalization? Cambridge: Polity Press.

Brauns, H. (1999) ‘Comparative considerations on the construction of the EGP-Class Schema based on official statistics of Germany, France and the UK’. Paper presented at the LASMAS Seminar on the Harmonisation of Classifications, Paris, December 6.

Breen, R. and Rottman, D. (1995) ‘Class analysis and class theory’, Sociology, 29: 453-473.

Cooper, H. and Arber, S. (2003) ‘Gender, Health and Occupational Classifications in Working and Later Life’ in D. Rose and D.J. Pevalin (Eds.) A Researcher’s Guide to the National Statistics Socio-economic Classification. London: Sage.

Davies, R., Elias, P. and Pierre, G. (2003) Estimates of the Family Gap in Pay. IER FENICs Project: University of Warwick.

Elias, P. (2000). ‘Status in Employment: a world survey of practices and problems’. Bulletin of Labour Statistics 11-21. ILO: Geneva.

Elias, P. and Birch, M. (1994) ISCO 88 (COM): A Guide for Users. University of Warwick, Institute for Employment Research.

Erikson, R. (1984) ‘Social Class of Men, Women and Families’, Sociology, 18:4:500-514.

Erikson, R. and Goldthorpe, J. H. (1992) The Constant Flux. Oxford: Clarendon.

Everaers, P. (1998) A Framework for Harmonisation: Key Social Indicators, Core Variables and a Framework for the joint use of Administrative Sources, Register and Survey Data. Luxembourg: Eurostat.

Fitzpatrick, J. (2003) ‘Examining Mortality rates by the NS-SEC’ in D. Rose and D.J. Pevalin (Eds.) A Researcher’s Guide to the National Statistics Socio-economic Classification. London: Sage.

Goldthorpe, J.H. (2000) On Sociology: Numbers, Narratives, and the Integration of Research and Theory. Oxford: OUP.

Goldthorpe, J.H. and McKnight, A. (2002) ‘The Economic Basis of Social Class’. Oxford: Nuffield College.

Goux D. and Maurin, E. (2001) ‘Social classes and employment relationships’, Paris: INSEE (Working Paper, January.

Grais, B. (1999) Socio-economic Classifications Used in Official Statistics of the Member States of the European Union. Luxembourg: Eurostat.

Jonsson, J. O., Mills, C. and Muller, W. (1996) ‘A half century of increasing educational openness? Social class, gender and educational attainment in Sweden, Germany and Britain’ in R. Erikson and J. O. Jonsson (Eds.) Can Education be Equalized? The Swedish Case in Comparative Perspective. Boulder: Westview Press.

Marshall, G., Roberts, S., Burgoyne, C., Swift, A. and Routh, D. (1995) ‘Class, Gender and the Asymmetry Hypothesis’, European Sociological Review, 11:1:1-15.

Martin, J. (1995) ‘Defining a Household Reference Person’, Survey Methodology Bulletin, 37:1-7.

Martin, J. (1998) ‘A New Definition for the Household Reference Person’, Survey Methodology Bulletin, 43:1-8.

Martin, J. and Barton, J. (1996) ‘The Effect of Changes in the Definition of the Household Reference Person’, Survey Methodology Bulletin, 38:1-8.

Østby, L., Everaers, P., Gassemyr, S. and Mejer, L. (2000) Harmonisation of Recommended Core Units, Variables and Classifications. Luxembourg: Eurostat.

Rose, D. and Pevalin, D.J. (Eds.) (2003) A Researcher’s Guide to the National Statistics Socio-economic Classification. London: Sage.

Rose, D. and Pevalin, D.J. (2002) ‘The National Statistics Socio-economic Classification: Unifying Official and Sociological Approaches to the Conceptualisation and Measurement of Social Class in the United Kingdom’, Sociétés Contemporaines, 45/46, 75-106.

Rose, D., Pevalin, D.J. and Elias, P. (with Martin, J.) (2001) Towards a European Socio-economic Classification: Final Report to Eurostat of the Expert Group. London and Colchester: ONS and ISER, University of Essex.

Sørensen, A. (1994) ‘Women, family and class’, Annual review of Sociology, 20: 27-47.

Sørensen, A.B. (1991) ‘On the usefulness of class analysis in research on social mobility and socioeconomic inequality’, Acta Sociologica, 34: 71-8.

Vagero, D. (2000) ‘Health inequalities in women and men: Studies of causes of death should use household criteria’, British Medical Journal, May 13, 320: 1287-1288.