Abstract

We study choice of profession in three groups of Russian-speaking Jewish families with different occupational distributions of the ancestors. This study continues exploration of the persistence of social status of families over centuries that was initiated in recent years. It was found previously that in some cases professions remain associated with the same surnames for many generations. Here the studied groups are defined by aclassof thesurname of individuals composing them. Theclassserves as a label that indicates a professional bias of the ancestors of the individual.One group are the bearers of the class of surnames which were used by rabbinical dynasties. The other group is constituted by occupational surnames, mostly connected to crafts. Finally, the last group are generic Jewish names defined as surnames belonging to neither of the above groups. We use the database that consists of 858 and 1057 of the first two groups, respectively, and 7471 generic Jewish surnames. The statistics of the database are those of individuals drawn at random from the considered groups. We determine shares of members of the groups working in a given type of occupations together with the confidence interval. The occupational type's definition agrees with International Standard Classification of Occupations. It is demonstrated that there is a statistically significant difference in the occupational structure of the three groups that holds beyond the uncertainty allowed by 95% confidence interval. We quantify the difference with a numerical measure of the overlap of professional preferences of different groups. We conclude that in our study the occupational bias of different population groups is preserved at least for two centuries that passed since the considered surnames appeared.

Highlights

  • Usage of surnames in studies of intergenerational mobility, such as investigations of temporal changes of representations of different surnames in various social groups, has developed into an established tool of research

  • If it is found that the surname occurs in some group significantly more than in the general population, the surname is overrepresented in the group

  • The individuals were Russian-speaking Jewish family members residing in the Former Soviet Union (FSU)

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Summary

Introduction

Usage of surnames in studies of intergenerational mobility, such as investigations of temporal changes of representations of different surnames in various social groups, has developed into an established tool of research (see e.g. Clark, 2015; Clark, 2012; Clark et al, 2015; Güell et al, 2015; and references therein; Santavirta & Stuhler, 2019 for a recent review). The frequency of occurrence of certain surnames in different professional or elite or other population groups is considered. This frequency is compared with the frequency of the surname’s occurrence in the general population. The main result of the aforementioned extensive studies is that the over- or under-representations do not change over long periods of time, much longer than would be implied by the conventional mobility measures. Those measures average over society, hiding the underlying low mobility rates for a given surname. These studies have been performed for different countries and cultures (see Clark, 2015 and references therein)

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