Download Free Aspects Of Social Mobility In The Soviet Union Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Aspects Of Social Mobility In The Soviet Union and write the review.

A history of Soviet education policy 1921-34, this is a sequel to the author's highly praised Commissariat of Enlightenment.
This title was first published in 1977. The Soviet Union is a socially divided society. The collectivities of which it is composed, whether designated as classes, strata, or "socio-occupational groups" (a term favored in recent Soviet writings on social structure), exhibit systematic differences in incomes and living standards, in control over the organization of the work place, in the educational and occupational opportunities open to their children. But what is new is that the social and economic inequalities which permeate Soviet life have become, within limits of course, accessible to study and discussion by Soviet scholars. The principal public justification for the study of inequality is the Party’s need for reliable information to implement its function of "scientific management" of the relations between the main social groups in Soviet society. This volume is a collection of six studies.
Compilation of social research writings on social stratification and social mobility in the USSR - examines some current social theories in respect of social structure, the working class, occupational choice, social mobility among the rural population, etc., and includes the research results of six separate surveys and empirical studies. Bibliography pp. 393 to 401, references and statistical tables.
This title was first published in 1973. The selections from Soviet sociological literature presented in this volume are significant from at least three standpoints. First, they reveal the extent to which the issue of social and economic inequality has become a subject for legitimate public discussion in the Soviet Union. Second, these selections offer the reader a means of appraising the quality of work in what, under Soviet conditions, is the formative period of a new intellectual discipline. Third, the selections provide abundant empirical evidence bearing on the forms and degrees of inequality currently found in Soviet society.