The Son Also Rises

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by Gregory Clark


  Becker, Gary, 126n

  Begay(e), 51, 310–11

  Benner, Nina, 26

  Bergeron, 50, 302, 303f

  Berkeley/Barclay, 79, 79n, 245n, 314

  Berners, 7

  Berners-Lee, Sir Timothy, 7

  Berzelius, John Jakob, 24

  birth rates. See fertility

  Björklund, Anders, 41, 138, 268n, 330

  black Africans: immigrants to United States, 50, 249; surnames of, 45, 248, 249. See also African Americans

  Bleakley, Hoyt, 269–70

  Borjas, George, 63, 124

  Boscawen, 302, 303f, 307, 313, 314

  Boserup, Simon Halphen, 136–37

  Botticini, Maristella, 228–30

  Bottom, 88, 93–94n

  Bowles, Sam, 112n

  Brahmins: endogamy of, 163; first names of women, 161t, 162; Kulin subcaste of, 147–48, 152–54, 153f, 158, 161t, 162, 163; political leaders, 167; poor, 154, 154n; status of, 144; status persistence of, 10, 154, 282; surnames of, 147–48, 150, 152–54, 153f

  Britain. See England; Wales

  British Empire, 144, 147, 154–55, 157

  Brudenell-Bruce, 91–92

  Cajuns, 62, 249–50, 249–50n

  Cambridge University: admissions policies of, 99–100, 102–3; costs of, 130n; lineage effects for students of, 122, 123f; membership records of, 72, 77, 99, 99n; social status of students of, 74

  Cambridge University student surnames: artisan, 72, 73f; common, 89, 89f; elite, 79–80, 80f; locative, 77, 77f; Norman, 83, 83f, 84, 87; rare, 6, 122, 221–23, 298–99, 299t; relative representation of rare, 101–2, 101f, 222f, 223, 224, 224f; relative representation of rare wealthy, 99–101, 100f, 221–23, 222f

  Campbell, Cameron, 180–81

  Canada: French population of, 49, 65–66; income shocks in, 272–73; surname frequencies data in, 305; Taiwanese immigrants to, 179. See also New France settlers

  Caplan, Bryan, 132, 281, 285

  Carnegie, Andrew, 213, 213n

  castes, Indian: classifications of, 144; “creamy layer,” 144; educational attainment and, 144–45, 145f; endogamy within, 160–64, 166; genetic distinctions of, 144, 144n; scheduled castes, 144, 149, 150, 151, 156–57, 156f, 158; surnames of, 147–51; untouchables, 144, 157. See also Brahmins; reservation system

  Cater, Bruce, 66

  Catholics, in Ireland, 231–32, 233–35, 233f, 234f, 235n, 315

  Celsius, Anders, 24

  Census Bureau. See U.S. Census Bureau

  Chaucer, Geoffrey, 75, 75n, 76f

  Cherokee: gaming profits of, 271; removal of, 270

  Chiang Kai-shek, 168

  children. See adopted children; education; families

  Chile: coup d’état (1973), 209, 209f, 211; electoral register (2004), 201–2, 205; elites in, 203–5, 208; encomenderos in, 203, 210; immigrants to, 204–5; income inequality in, 199; incomes in, 201–2, 202f, 206–8, 207t; indigenous groups in, 202–3; landowners in, 204, 206; Pinochet dictatorship in, 209, 210, 211; poverty in, 199, 200f; social mobility in, 200, 207–11; Spanish settlement of, 203

  Chilean surnames: Basque, 203–4; in census (2004), 206, 206t; of elites, 203–5, 206t, 207t, 208, 210; French, 205; German, 205; Italian, 204–5; Mapuche, 202–3, 206, 207–8, 210; occupational incomes by group, 206–8, 207t, 210, 210f, 211f; rare, 203, 204–5, 205; of underclass, 202–3, 206–8, 206t, 207t

  China: Cultural Revolution in, 168–70, 169f; education in, 169–70, 173–74, 177; emigration from, 177; kin networks in, 180–81, 180–81n; land reform in, 168; modern elites in, 172–75, 173f; Republican era in, 168, 173, 175, 176, 177; revolution in, 168; war casualties in, 175. See also Qing China

  China, social mobility in: Cultural Revolution effects, 168–70; evidence from Qing elite surnames, 171–75, 173f, 180; evidence from surname–place of origin identifiers, 175–78, 177t; geographic limitations on, 172; in lower Yangzi River valley, 175–78, 177t, 226–27, 227f; low rates of, 180, 181; persistence rates, 226; in postreform era, 170; in Qing era, 171–75, 180, 225–27, 227f; studies of, 180

  Chinese Communist Party, 168, 176, 180

  Chinese surnames: common, 170, 170n, 172, 175, 175n; from lower Yangzi River valley, 172–74, 175–78, 175n; place of origin identifiers and, 175–78, 225–27, 226f; of Qing elites, 171–75, 173f, 176, 180, 181, 225–27; rare, 171–75, 173f; relative representation among modern elites, 172–75, 173f, 176–78, 180; relative representation over time, 226–27, 226f, 227f; in Taiwan, 178

  Cholmondeley, 316

  Christians: Catholics, 231–32, 233–35, 233f, 234f, 235n, 315; Coptic, 10, 238, 247, 249, 282, 285; early, 230–31; first names in India, 161, 161t, 162; from India, 248; intermarriage in India, 162; Jewish converts, 230–31; Maronites, 247, 248; in Muslim societies, 238–39; Protestants, 229, 231–35

  Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, FamilySearch website, 313–14

  Clark(e), 71, 89, 218, 307

  cognitive ability (IQ), 110n, 112, 112n, 116–17, 264, 264n, 265f

  Cohen, 47, 308, 312

  Colorado Adoption Project, 264

  Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960–2010 (Murray), 69, 263–64

  Communist Party, Chinese, 168, 176, 180

  Coptic Church, 248

  Copts: conversions to Islam, 238; elite status of, 238, 249; physicians, 247; status persistence of, 10, 282, 285; surnames of, 247, 285; in United States, 247, 249

  Corak, Miles, 146n, 292n, 319

  Cornwallis, Charles, 91

  cultural capital, 63

  Dalton School, 279

  Darwin, 132–33, 134–35, 135n, 284

  Darwin, Charles, 132–33, 134, 135f, 284

  Defoe, 93–94

  Defoe, Daniel, 93–94

  Denmark: noble surnames in, 22–23; wealth inheritance in, 136–37, 138f. See also Nordic countries

  Dickens, Charles, 213, 213n

  Directory of Physicians in the United States, 45–46, 51, 52, 54, 68, 164, 194–95, 309

  doctors. See physicians

  Doherty/Dougherty, 310–11, 312–13, 312f, 315

  Domesday Book, 7, 51, 81, 85, 107, 314, 316

  downward mobility: avoiding, 14–15, 281–86; of elites, 13–14, 212–15, 214f, 216, 280–82; in England, 13–14, 76–78, 79–80, 85, 86–87; fertility rates and, 246–47, 246f; of samurai, 185–86, 195, 196; surname variants and, 316–17; in Sweden, 41. See also regression to mean; social mobility

  earnings. See incomes

  Eastern Europe, Jews in, 235, 236–37, 237n

  East India Company, 147

  Eckstein, Zvi, 228–30

  education: in China, 169–70, 173–74, 177; economic outcomes of, 273; in England, 73, 130–31, 131n; in India, 144–46; intergenerational correlations in, 3–5, 4f, 100–103; in Japan, 183, 185, 185t, 284; preschool, 273–74; private schools, 130–31, 131n, 279–80; public support for, 129–31, 272, 273–74; in Sweden, 19, 129–30, 266–68, 275; in United States, 111, 131, 131n, 279–80. See also medical schools; universities

  educational attainment: of adopted children, 266–68, 267f; of African Americans, 55, 56f; family influences on, 284; of Gypsies and Travellers, 240; of immigrants to United States, 249, 251, 251n; of Indian castes, 144–45, 145f; of Japanese Americans, 67; of Jews in United States, 55, 55f; life expectancies and, 275; of women, 281

  educational mobility: in England, 99–103, 117, 221–24; in Japan, 185–86, 186t, 284; in Korea, 197–98; measuring with surname frequencies, 298–99, 299t; persistence rates of, 117, 223–24; in Sweden, 35–39; symmetrical movements in, 221–23; in United States, 54

  Edward I, King, 253

  Egypt. See Copts

  elites: downward mobility of, 13–14, 212–15, 214f, 216, 280–82; emergence of, 140, 228–31, 239, 251–52, 299–300; endogamy among, 135n, 163, 239, 282; fertility rates of, 192, 236, 237n, 280; initial mean status of, 298, 298f; investments in children by, 279–81, 285; status persistence of, 10, 216, 229, 239, 251, 252; in United
States, 45, 247–51, 263–64, 277–78, 279–81. See also nobility; individual countries and groups

  elite surnames: bimodal distributions of, 41, 42f; regression to mean by, 107; relative representation of, 20; in United States, 45, 47–49, 54–55, 247–51, 248f. See also nobility; rare surnames

  endogamy: among elites, 135n, 163, 239, 282; as explanation of status persistence, 160, 252, 282; genetic transmission and, 139–40; in India, 160–64, 166; of Jews, 237; of minorities in Muslim societies, 239; of New France descendants, 64–65, 64f; status persistence and, 13, 239; in United States, 282–83

  England: Glorious Revolution in, 167; Industrial Revolution in, 6, 75, 87, 218, 219; Jews in, 102, 240–41, 242f; nobility of, 91. See also Parliament members

  England, medieval: artisans in, 71–73, 74; class structure of, 74; downward mobility of elites, 76–78, 79–80, 85, 86–87; education in, 73; elites in, 72–73, 76–87, 236; Norman conquerors in, 76, 79, 81–84; Parliament members in, 72, 253–55; persistence rates in, 74, 74f, 84; poll taxes in, 71–72; probate records in, 84–86, 86f, 216–18; social mobility in, 70, 72–80, 83–84, 86–87, 105–6. See also English surnames, medieval

  England, modern: church records in, 313; educational mobility in, 99–103; education in, 130–31, 131n; fertility and status in, 132–35, 133f, 134f; immigrants to, 90, 240–41; inheritance tax rates in, 96, 97f; life expectancies in, 114, 115–16, 116f, 116t, 314; military of, 256–57, 257t; minority groups in, 240; persistence rates in, 84, 95, 117, 219–20; probate rates in, 96–98, 97f, 117, 117f, 138, 244–45, 306–7, 306t, 312–14; probate records in, 91–98, 216–20, 306, 307, 313; Reform Acts, 105; social mobility in, 88, 95, 105–6; underclass in, 240; wealth inheritance in, 94–98, 95f, 95t. See also English surnames, modern; Parliament members

  England, social mobility in: consistent rates of, 135, 138; downward mobility of elites, 13–14, 76–78, 79–80, 85, 86–87; educational mobility, 99–103, 117, 221–24; in Industrial Revolution, 218, 219; low rates of, 6–8, 95–96, 100, 102, 105–6; in medieval era, 70, 72–80, 83–84, 86–87, 105–6; in modern era, 88, 95, 105–6; persistence rates, 84, 86t, 98, 219–20, 219t, 221t; regression to mean, 83–84, 87, 88, 216–19; rich as share of population, 10–11

  English surnames, medieval: artisan, 71–73, 73f, 75, 85, 87, 254, 254f; changes in, 75–76, 80; inheritance of, 71–72; noble, 91; occupational, 71–72, 89–90; patronyms, 314; persistence rates, 85, 86–87, 86t, 217; of property owners, 78–80, 79t; rare, 216–18, 217t, 222f; regression to mean by, 79–80, 83–84; toponyms, 314; variants of, 316–17. See also locative surnames; Norman surnames

  English surnames, modern: of African Americans, 50–51; of barristers, 88–89, 309; changes in, 93, 93–94n; common, 88, 89–90, 89f, 242, 244–46; data sources for, 304–5, 312–14; hyphenated, 90; of Irish origin, 312–13; longevity rates by groups, 115–16, 116f, 116t; of medical professionals, 307–9, 308t; origins of, 316–17; of Parliament members, 103–4, 104f; persistence rates, 217, 219–20, 221t; rare, 6–7, 88–89, 90–102, 91t, 103–4, 216–23, 217t; status of, 88, 306–9, 312–14; wealth inheritance and, 94–95, 95f, 95t

  entropy, social, 3, 5, 107

  equality. See inequality

  ethnic capital, 124

  ethnic groups. See minority groups; individual groups

  exogamy. See intermarriage

  families: incomes of, 126–29; kin networks, 180–81, 180–81n; underlying status of, 283–86; windfall gains of, 128, 271–73. See also adopted children; genetic transmission; grandparents; lineages; surnames

  FamilySearch website, 313–14

  family sizes: of elites, 10–11, 236, 280; of English upper classes, 14, 132–35, 133f, 134f, 236; of Gypsies and Travellers, 240, 241t, 245–46; investments in children, 279–81; regression to mean and, 128, 280; social mobility and, 13, 132–35, 246–47. See also fertility

  Feliciano, Cynthia, 249

  Ferrie, Joe, 118n, 269–70, 290n

  fertility: correlation to status, 132–35, 133f, 134f, 237n; of elites, 192, 236, 237n, 280; regression to mean and, 246–47, 246f

  fertility rates, of underclasses, 246–47

  Finland. See Nordic countries

  first names: of Gypsies / Travellers, 243–44; in India, 161–63, 161t, 162t

  Franco-Americans. See New France settlers

  Frei, Eduardo, 209, 210

  French Canadians, 49, 65–66. See also New France settlers

  French immigrants to Chile, 205

  French surnames, 49, 205. See also New France settlers

  Gagnon, 49, 50, 50f, 63, 65

  Galton, Francis, 25n, 90, 136, 137f, 223, 292n, 325

  Gates, Bill, 11

  generations, length between, 20n. See also intergenerational correlations

  genetic transmission: of biological traits, 136, 137f, 266; endogamy and, 139–40; importance of, 6, 12–14, 268–69, 274, 281; of intelligence, 264, 264n; as primary source of status persistence, 13, 14–15, 126–27, 136–37; regression to mean, 136, 139; of underlying abilities, 14–15, 126–27, 128, 263. See also inheritance; nature vs. nurture

  genotype: definition, 11–12; social, 12, 14–15, 282, 283–86

  Georgia, land lottery in, 270

  German immigrants to Chile, 205

  German surnames, 50–51, 205, 308

  German universities, 277

  Gini coefficient, 5

  Gintis, Herb, 112n

  Glasgow, 1, 2f

  good society, 1, 5, 274

  Google Scholar, 193–94, 195–96

  grandparents: influence of, 118–22, 119f, 294–95; intergenerational correlations with, 5, 119–21, 120t, 292–95. See also families; lineages

  Great Britain. See England; Wales

  Great Britain Family Names website, 305

  Gu, 172

  Gypsies/Travellers: children of, 240, 241f, 243–44; in England, 10, 89n, 240–46, 241t; fertility rates of, 240, 241t, 245–46; first names of, 243–44; in Ireland, 240, 243n; origins of, 240–44; probate rates of, 307, 312–13, 312f; social mobility of, 244–46; status persistence of, 10, 240, 247; surnames of, 89n, 240–42, 243f, 244–46, 244n, 309, 312–13; as underclass, 240

  Haitians, 248

  Hamlet (Shakespeare), 22–23

  Hao, Yu, 178, 179

  Hardy, Thomas, Tess of the d’Urbervilles, 317

  Harootunian, Harry D., 186

  Hayls, John, 7f

  HDI. See Human Development Index

  Head Start Program, 273–74

  Hebert, 50, 310–11

  Heckman, James, 261, 262, 264, 273

  heights, genetic transmission of, 136, 137f, 266

  Hertz, Tom, 123, 123n, 124, 146n, 292n, 319

  higher education. See education; universities

  Hindus: endogamy of, 161–63; first names of women, 161–63, 161t. See also castes

  Hindu surnames: elite, 147–48, 150; mixed, 149, 150, 157, 158, 165; of physicians in India, 147–50; of physicians in United States, 247, 251; of poor, 149, 150, 155, 158, 163

  Hispanics. See Latino Americans

  Hmong, 250–51

  Ho, Ping-ti, 180

  Homer, 107

  Hu, Songhua, 180

  Huguenots, 90, 91, 92

  human-capital theory, 126–35. See also education

  Human Development Index (HDI), 201–2

  Iceland. See Nordic countries

  immigrants: to Canada, 179; to Chile, 204–5; to England, 90; to Sweden, 26n immigrants to United States: assimilation of, 63; educational attainment of, 249, 251, 251n; Hmong, 250–51; illegal, 251; incomes of, 251n; Japanese, 67–68, 68t, 124; Latin American, 251; restrictions on, 67, 68; selectivity, 249; skilled, 249; social mobility of, 124, 277–78; Taiwanese, 179; Vietnamese, 249. See also New France settlers

  income inequality. See inequality

  income mobility: in Chile, 200; in Japan, 184; in Korea, 196; in Taiwan, 178. See also social mobility

  incomes: of adopted children, 266, 267f; in C
hile, 201–2, 202f, 206–8, 207t; correlations among siblings, 268–69, 269t; education and, 273; exogenous shocks to, 128, 271–73; of immigrants to United States, 251n; intergenerational correlations of, 3, 4f, 5, 109, 126–28, 127f, 127n, 146; of parents, 126–28, 289–92, 289f; random component of, 108; as status measure, 108, 109, 111–12, 112t; Swedish surnames and, 27–28, 29f

  India: British rule of, 144, 147, 154–55, 157; elites in, 143, 147–48, 150; independence of, 144, 154, 155, 156, 167; Muslims in, 144, 149–50, 151–52, 154, 239n; prime ministers of, 167. See also Brahmins; castes

  India, social mobility in: in Bengal, 147–57, 158–60; of Christians, 143; endogamy and, 160–64, 166; at family level, 164; of Hindu groups, 143; intergenerational correlation in income, 146; low rates of, 143, 150, 159–60, 166; of Muslims, 151–52; persistence rates, 150–51, 151t, 154–55; of scheduled castes, 156–57; studies of, 146, 146n. See also reservation system

  Indians. See Native Americans

  Indian surnames: Christian, 162; common, 147; of elites, 147–48, 148f, 150, 152–55, 153f, 157, 158; first names from another religious group, 161–63, 162t; mixed Hindu, 149, 150, 157, 158, 165; Muslim, 148, 149–50, 151–52, 162; of poor Hindus, 149, 150, 155, 158, 163; relative representation among physicians and judges, 147–50, 148f, 150f, 151, 152–57, 153f, 158; of scheduled castes, 149, 150, 151, 156–57, 158

  indigenous groups. See Mapuche; Native Americans

  Industrial Revolution, 6, 75, 87, 218, 219

  inequality: in Chile, 199; criticism of, 1; Gini coefficient, 5; in Nordic countries, 19, 275–76; reducing, 15, 274–77; status persistence and, 9–10, 126–28, 199–200; in Sweden, 113–14, 114f; in United States, 113–14, 114f, 261, 263–64, 277–78. See also elites; social mobility; underclasses

  inheritance: of cognitive abilities, 110n, 112n, 116–17; of cultural traits, 126, 136, 137f, 139–40; economic models of, 126–28, 127f, 127n; of longevity, 114–16; matrilineal vs. patrilineal lines of, 15–16; of underlying status, 108–13, 126; of wealth, 94–98, 95f, 95t, 136–37, 138f. See also genetic transmission

  Inquisitions Post Mortem (IPM), 78–80, 79t, 80f, 85–86, 85f, 86f, 87

  intelligence. See cognitive ability

  intergenerational correlations: in China, 173–75; in education, 3–5, 4f, 100–103; estimates of, 109; of fathers and children, 289–92; with grandparents, 5, 119–21, 120t, 292–95; in incomes, 3, 4f, 5, 109, 126–28, 127f, 127n, 146; in Japan, 185; of mother’s status, 290–92; with multiple generations, 5, 292–95, 293f; for rare English surnames, 94–98, 95t, 98t, 106, 120–21, 284; as social mobility measure, 1–3, 290; in Sweden, 20, 30, 32, 36, 37, 41; in Taiwan, 178; universal rate of, 12; of wealth in England, 94–98, 106, 120–21, 120t, 121f, 284. See also persistence rates

 

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