Class, Status and the Stratification of Residential Preferences amongst Accountants

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Abstract

Using data from the 1911 Irish Census, and adopting a Weberian focus, this paper investigates the separate explanatory power of class and status in the stratification of outcomes. We find that both class and status have independent explanatory power in terms of the geographical residential patterns of various occupations, including accountants, in early twentieth-century Dublin, Ireland. We also demonstrate the usefulness of considering the experience of accounts in a comprative context.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)336-359
Number of pages24
JournalHistorical Social Research
Volume39
Issue number1
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Keywords

  • Accountants
  • Census
  • Class
  • Dublin
  • Status
  • Weber

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