
Contents
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33.1 Class Inequalities 1945–97 33.1 Class Inequalities 1945–97
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33.2 Worsening Inequalities 2005– 33.2 Worsening Inequalities 2005–
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33.3 Education Policy and Politics 33.3 Education Policy and Politics
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33.4 Conclusion 33.4 Conclusion
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References References
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33 Class
Get accessFiona Devine is Professor and Head of the School of Social Sciences at the University of Manchester.
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Published:02 January 2010
Cite
Abstract
This article deals with the evidence on widening class inequalities and addresses how that evidence may be used to evaluate Labour's ten years in power as it has sought to make Britain a more equal society. It first covers the main patterns and trends in class inequalities in Britain from the 1940s to the 1990s. The ongoing controversies around class and the growing consensus that social mobility is declining are explained. The article then elaborates Labour's social policies to enhance social mobility with specific reference to its education policies. Furthermore, it presents the challenges that remain and the difficulties that Labour confronts in tackling inequalities that have proved so resistant to change. The reproduction of class inequalities across generations is a complex affair and policy interventions have to be equally sophisticated in fashion. To date, policies to alleviate class inequalities have a mild effect.
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