G. Toka et J. Dronkers, SIBLING RESEMBLANCE IN EDUCATIONAL-ATTAINMENT, OCCUPATIONAL PRESTIGE,AND WEALTH IN HUNGARY DURING THE COMMUNIST REGIME, European sociological review, 12(3), 1996, pp. 251-269
In order to test the suggested decline of the family we compare siblin
g resemblance in the life-chances of five Hungarian cohorts born durin
g the twentieth century. Similar studies in Germany and the Netherland
s show less sibling resemblance in younger cohorts. However, one might
argue that this trend towards the decline of sibling resemblance cann
ot be found in societies with a communist regime. A consequence of the
communist regime is an increase in the importance of the family as th
e most important means of improving one's life-chances, because the ot
her non-political institutions have been destroyed or are dominated by
the party. The most important conclusion in this analysis of sibling
resemblance in educational attainment, occupational prestige, and weal
th in Hungary during the communist regime is that this resemblance did
not decrease in younger birth cohorts, contrary to results from analy
ses on changes occurring over time in sibling resemblance in Western E
uropean societies. The slowly declining effect of father's educational
attainment and wealth is less than might be predicted on the basis of
theories on modernization or state socialism.