User:EliGamez/sandbox

Editing Social Mobility Plan
I plan to add a more world view approach to the article Social Mobility by expanding beyond the United States. I plan to add information on other countries and how mobility looks like in other countries through the addition to other sources. Additionally, I plan on adding markers of social mobility and expanding on theories revolving social mobility.

Here are some of the sources I will use:

 * Assari, Shervin, and Assari, Shervin. “Race, Intergenerational Social Mobility and Stressful Life Events.” Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland) 8, no. 10 (September 20, 2018). http://search.proquest.com/docview/2111152185/.
 * This will address how race contributes or is affected my social mobility.
 * Billingsley, Sunnee, and Billingsley, Sunnee. “Intragenerational Social Mobility and Cause-Specific Premature Mortality.” PloS one 14, no. 2 (January 1, 2019): e0211977–e0211977. http://search.proquest.com/docview/2185565805/.
 * Campos-Matos, Inês, and Kawachi, Ichiro. “Social Mobility and Health in European Countries: Does Welfare Regime Type Matter?” Social Science & Medicine 142 (October 2015): 241–248.
 * Explores how health and health care accessibility can make it impossible to move up the social ladder.
 * Dawinder S. Sidhu. “Civic Education as an Instrument of Social Mobility.” Denver University Law Review 90 (January 1, 2013): 977–1251.
 * Education and social mobility.
 * Gugushvili, Alexi. “Intergenerational Social Mobility and Popular Explanations of Poverty: A Comparative Perspective.” Social Justice Research 29, no. 4 (December 2016): 402–428.
 * Mukherjee, Sucharita Sinha. 2013. “Women’s Empowerment and Gender Bias in the Birth and Survival of Girls in Urban India.” Research Notes: Feminist Economics 19(1).
 * This source talks about how even when educated, females can still not move up social due to their sex.
 * Neelsen, John P. “Education and Social Mobility.” Comparative Education Review 19, no. 1 (February 1, 1975): 129–143.
 * Oishi, Shigehiro, Koo, Minkyung, and Buttrick, Nicholas R. “The Socioecological Psychology of Upward Social Mobility.” American Psychologist (December 17, 2018)
 * Interesting to see idea of how we can be the ones to impede our own social mobility upward.
 * Tufiș, Paula A., and Alwin, Duane F. “Current Views on Social Class, Status, and Mobility.” International Review of Social Research 5, no. 1 (June 30, 2015): 1–3.
 * Warner, Cody. “On the Move: Incarceration, Race, and Residential Mobility.” Social Science Research 52 (July 2015): 451–464.
 * Explores this question: After incarceration, how do we get individual to assimilate into society again and is there even a hope for social mobility for them?
 * Watt, Paul. “Social Stratification and Housing Mobility.” Sociology 30, no. 3 (August 1996): 533–550.
 * Explores how our neighborhood can enhance or hinder our social mobility.
 * Yaish, Meir, and Andersen, Robert. “Social Mobility in 20 Modern Societies: The Role of Economic and Political Context.” Social Science Research41, no. 3 (May 2012): 527–538.
 * This can fit into the section that address perspectives on social mobility.

EliGamez (talk) 05:06, 1 October 2019 (UTC)