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Acknowledgements; Content; Figures; Tables; 1 Introduction; 2 Social change and social mobility; 2.1 Societal change and the occupational structure; 2.2 Social mobility in industrial and post-industrial societies; 2.3 Same, same but different?; 3 Class and intergenerational mobility in contemporary societies; 3.1 Gradational concepts of social inequality; 3.2 Micro-classes and occupational class inequalities; 3.3 Employment relations and social class: the EGP scheme; 3.4 Exploitation and social class: Wright's class scheme; 3.5 Social class and work logics: the Oesch scheme.

3.6 Class and the division of labor: the Esping-Andersen scheme4 The derivation of the IPICS class scheme; 4.1 Horizontal differentiation according to the work logic; 4.2 Vertical differentiation according to employment relations; 4.3 Gender, race and class; 4.4 Social mobility and IPICS; 5 Horizontal and vertical stratification of occupational positions; 5.1 Testing the validity of the IPICS classes; 5.2 Horizontal differences between occupations; 5.3 Vertical differences between occupations; 6 Datasets, Operationalization and conceptual issues.

6.1 Employed datasets for the analysis of social mobility6.2 Occupational classifications and IPICS; 6.3 Sample and cohort design; 7 Empirical description of industrial and post-industrial classes; 7.1 Socio-demographic composition; 7.2 Class and educational assets; 7.3 Class and economic assets; 7.4 Class profiles; 7.5 Class and structural change; 8 Absolute Mobility in Germany over the 20th century; 8.1 Changing distributions of education, origin and social class; 8.2 Aggregated mobility patterns; 8.3 Changing aggregated absolute mobility patterns.

8.4 The evolution of segment-specific outflow mobility patterns8.5 Summary; 9 Absolute mobility in the U.S. over the 20th century; 9.1 Changing distributions of education, origin and social class; 9.2 Aggregated mobility patterns; 9.3 Changing aggregated absolute mobility patterns; 9.4 The evolution of segment-specific outflow mobility patterns; 9.5 Summary; 10 Relative mobility in Germany and the U.S.; 10.1 A model of social fluidity for post-industrial societies; 10.2 Country-specific adaptations: Germany; 10.3 Country-specific adaptations: United States; 11 Social fluidity in Germany.

11.1 Barriers and bridges: Social fluidity in Germany11.2 Comparing the IPICS and EGP classes directly: the German case; 11.3 Changing social fluidity across cohorts; 11.4 Summary; 12 Social fluidity in the United States of America; 12.1 Barriers and bridges: Social fluidity in the United States; 12.2 Comparing the IPICS and EGP classes directly: the American case; 12.3 Changing social fluidity across cohorts; 12.4 Summary; 13 Social mobility in two post-industrial societies; 13.1 Comparing social fluidity levels between the U.S. and Germany; 13.2 Shortcomings and future work; 14 References.

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