PART I. INTRODUCTION
1: Vegard Iversen, Anirudh Krishna, and Kunal Sen: The state of
knowledge about social mobility in the developing world
PART II: THEORY AND CONCEPTS
2: Patrizio Piraino: Drivers of mobility in the Global South
3: Gary Fields: Exploring concepts of social mobility
4: Vegard Iversen: Social mobility in developing countries:
Measurement and downward mobility pitfalls
5: Ravi Kanbur: In praise of snapshots
PART III: TYPES OF MOBILITY
6: Himanshu and Peter Lanjouw: Income mobility in the developing
world: Recent approaches and evidence
7: Florencia Torche: Educational mobility in the developing
world
8: Anthony Heath and Yizhang Zhao: Rethinking occupational mobility
in developing countries: Conceptual issues and empirical
findings
PART IV: DIALOGUE ON MEASUREMENT AND METHODS
9: M. Shahe Emran and Forhad Shilpi: Economic approach to
intergenerational mobility: Measures, methods, and challenges in
developing countries
10: Yaojun Li: Social mobility in China: A case study of social
mobility research in the Global South
11: Divya Vaid: Ethnography and social mobility: A review
12: Gregory Clark: Measuring social mobility in historic and less
developed societies
PART V: DRIVERS AND INHIBITORS
13: Jere Behrman: Social mobility and human capital in low- and
middle-income countries
14: Anirudh Krishna and Emily Rains: Informalities, volatility, and
precarious social mobility in urban slums
15: Nancy Luke: Gender and social mobility: Exploring gender
attitudes and women's labour force participation
16: Patricia Funjika and Rachel M. Gisselquist: Social mobility and
horizontal inequality
17: Anandi Mani and Emma Riley: Social networks as levers of
mobility
PART VI: CONCLUSIONS
18: Vegard Iversen, Anirudh Krishna, and Kunal Sen: Social mobility
in developing countries: Directions for research practice,
knowledge gaps and policy support
Vegard Iversen is Professor of Development Economics and Head of
the Livelihoods and Institutions Department, Natural Resources
Institute (NRI), University of Greenwich. After completing his PhD
in development economics from University of Cambridge in 2000, he
was tenured faculty at School of Development Studies, University of
East Anglia until he moved to India in 2006. While living and
working in India he was a Research Fellow in IFPRI's New Delhi
office, a
visiting faculty member at Indian Statistical Institute (Delhi), a
Professor and Vice Dean at Jindal School of Government and Public
Policy, an Adjunct Professor at Sanford School of Public Policy's
Duke
Semester in India programme and a Professor in the Economics Area,
Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad. He received the Annual
Dudley Seers Memorial Prize for the best article in Journal of
Development Studies in 2008 and has served on the journal's
editorial board since 2016. Anirudh Krishna is the Edgar T.
Thompson Professor of Public Policy and Political Science at Duke
University. He received his PhD in government from Cornell
University in 2000, and a Master's in economics
from Delhi University in 1980. Professor Krishna's research
investigates how poor communities and individuals in developing
countries cope with the structural and personal constraints that
result in poverty and
powerlessness. Before returning to academia in 2000, he spent 14
years with the Indian Administrative Service, managing diverse
rural and urban development initiatives. He received an honorary
doctorate from Uppsala University in 2011; the Olaf Palme Visiting
Professorship from the Swedish Research Council in 2007; the Dudley
Seers Memorial Prize in 2005 and 2013; and a best article award of
the American Political Science Association in 2002. Kunal Sen has
over three decades of experience in
academic and applied development economics research. He is the
author of eight books and the editor of five volumes on the
economics and political economy of development. He is Director of
UNU-WIDER in
Helsinki, and is a Professor of development economics at the Global
Development Institute, University of Manchester. Professor Sen is a
leading international expert on the political economy of growth and
development. He has performed extensive research on international
finance, the political economy determinants of inclusive growth,
the dynamics of poverty, social exclusion, female labour force
participation, and the informal sector in developing economies. His
research has focused on India,
East Asia, and sub-Saharan Africa. He was awarded the Sanjaya Lall
Prize in 2006 and the Dudley Seers Prize in 2003 for his
publications.
This collection of essays offers valuable insights on the
measurement and meaning of social mobility both as an inherent part
of economic development and as a valued outcome. This careful
framing and measurement of an inherently long-term process, fraught
with challenges even when the best data are available, deepens our
understanding of equality of opportunity in a wide variety of
countries and circumstances. This book will certainly be a valuable
touchstone encouraging more research and thinking about the
relationship between growth and mobility.
*Miles Corak, The Graduate Center, City University of New York*
Social or economic mobility may well be the most important of all
concepts related to social wellbeing, but it is also the most
challenging, both conceptually and empirically. In this book,
Iversen, Krishna, and Sen have assembled an all-star
interdisciplinary group of authors who deftly navigate the
labyrinth of different meanings, measures, and dimensions of
mobility in the challenging context of low- and middle-income
countries. The diversity of methods and perspectives is a real
strength of this important contribution.
*Francisco H. G. Ferreira, Amartya Sen Professor of Inequality
Studies, London School of Economics*
How can people in developing countries attain a better life? How
secure are their achievements? Can they avert catastrophic descents
into enduring impoverishment? What enables or impedes their upward
social mobility, and what interventions might reduce (and prevent
the widening of) social and economic inequalities? From diverse
disciplinary perspectives, the studies in this book provide vital
insights into the challenges of studying and comprehending social
mobility in developing countries—and underline the urgency of
highlighting the ever-shifting risks and precarity with which most
people must grapple in their daily endeavours to sustain (and
perhaps even enhance) their wellbeing.
*Patricia Jeffery, Professor Emerita in Sociology, University of
Edinburgh*
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