Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the Netherlands

This article studies the relation between rural-urban migration and the upward and downward social mobility of different social groups from the perspective of the sending countryside and not of the receiving city. It utilizes two datasets regarding people born in the Groningen clay soil region (the...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Richard Paping, Jacek Pawlowski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Institute of Social History 2018-02-01
Series:Historical Life Course Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hlcs.nl/article/view/9329
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832574233306202112
author Richard Paping
Jacek Pawlowski
author_facet Richard Paping
Jacek Pawlowski
author_sort Richard Paping
collection DOAJ
description This article studies the relation between rural-urban migration and the upward and downward social mobility of different social groups from the perspective of the sending countryside and not of the receiving city. It utilizes two datasets regarding people born in the Groningen clay soil region (the Netherlands). By applying a revised version of HISCLASS for social stratification, it compares the social mobility of urban migrants with those staying in the countryside. Analysis of both databases shows distinct social differences in rural-urban migration, with children from non-agrarian rural elite families moving very frequently to a city; whereas, children from farmers and unskilled (farm) labourers were much less attracted by urban centres, despite restricted job opportunities in agriculture. Children from lower managers, skilled and lower-skilled workers in industry and services took an intermediate posi­tion. For all social groups (except for children of farmers), male urban migrants had on average a better social mobility performance than rural stayers, whereas for females the differences were rather limit­ed. Children of unskilled workers, who rarely went to large cities, were far more successful than rural stayers. This suggests a positive selection. For Groningen, the findings oppose the pessimistic view of nineteenth and early-twentieth century rural-urban migrants mainly being pushed to the city by local circumstances, although their social opportunities in the countryside were indeed limited. The detailed database shows also that even a temporary movement to the city resulted on average in an improved social mobility performance, an indication that urban migrants of nearly all social backgrounds often accrued extra human capital during their stay in a large city.
format Article
id doaj-art-7c762220b8264746b7bb4eb2c57c5fae
institution Kabale University
issn 2352-6343
language English
publishDate 2018-02-01
publisher International Institute of Social History
record_format Article
series Historical Life Course Studies
spelling doaj-art-7c762220b8264746b7bb4eb2c57c5fae2025-02-02T00:15:43ZengInternational Institute of Social HistoryHistorical Life Course Studies2352-63432018-02-016Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the NetherlandsRichard PapingJacek PawlowskiThis article studies the relation between rural-urban migration and the upward and downward social mobility of different social groups from the perspective of the sending countryside and not of the receiving city. It utilizes two datasets regarding people born in the Groningen clay soil region (the Netherlands). By applying a revised version of HISCLASS for social stratification, it compares the social mobility of urban migrants with those staying in the countryside. Analysis of both databases shows distinct social differences in rural-urban migration, with children from non-agrarian rural elite families moving very frequently to a city; whereas, children from farmers and unskilled (farm) labourers were much less attracted by urban centres, despite restricted job opportunities in agriculture. Children from lower managers, skilled and lower-skilled workers in industry and services took an intermediate posi­tion. For all social groups (except for children of farmers), male urban migrants had on average a better social mobility performance than rural stayers, whereas for females the differences were rather limit­ed. Children of unskilled workers, who rarely went to large cities, were far more successful than rural stayers. This suggests a positive selection. For Groningen, the findings oppose the pessimistic view of nineteenth and early-twentieth century rural-urban migrants mainly being pushed to the city by local circumstances, although their social opportunities in the countryside were indeed limited. The detailed database shows also that even a temporary movement to the city resulted on average in an improved social mobility performance, an indication that urban migrants of nearly all social backgrounds often accrued extra human capital during their stay in a large city.https://hlcs.nl/article/view/9329Large databasesSocial mobilityCountrysideCityMigration
spellingShingle Richard Paping
Jacek Pawlowski
Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the Netherlands
Historical Life Course Studies
Large databases
Social mobility
Countryside
City
Migration
title Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the Netherlands
title_full Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the Netherlands
title_fullStr Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the Netherlands
title_full_unstemmed Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the Netherlands
title_short Success or Failure in the City? Social Mobility and Rural-Urban Migration in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century Groningen, the Netherlands
title_sort success or failure in the city social mobility and rural urban migration in nineteenth and early twentieth century groningen the netherlands
topic Large databases
Social mobility
Countryside
City
Migration
url https://hlcs.nl/article/view/9329
work_keys_str_mv AT richardpaping successorfailureinthecitysocialmobilityandruralurbanmigrationinnineteenthandearlytwentiethcenturygroningenthenetherlands
AT jacekpawlowski successorfailureinthecitysocialmobilityandruralurbanmigrationinnineteenthandearlytwentiethcenturygroningenthenetherlands