Institute of Sociology
of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology
of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Epikhina Y.B. (2023) Well-being as an Indicator of Subjective Mobility. Mir Rossii, vol. 32, no 3, pp. 97–118 (in Russian). DOI: 10.17323 ...



Epikhina Y.B. (2023) Well-being as an Indicator of Subjective Mobility. Mir Rossii, vol. 32, no 3, pp. 97–118 (in Russian). DOI: 10.17323/1811-038X-2023-32-3-97-118
ISSN 1811-038X
DOI 10.17323/1811-038X-2023-32-3-97-118
ÐÈÍÖ: https://elibrary.ru/contents.asp?id=53978425

Posted on site: 08.06.23

Òåêñò ñòàòüè íà ñàéòå æóðíàëà URL: https://mirros.hse.ru/article/view/17315 (äàòà îáðàùåíèÿ 08.06.2023)


Abstract

This article investigates into the relatively new research area of subjective mobility. It examines existing theoretical approaches to defining and studying subjective mobility, identifying two primary directions: subjective mobility as the consequence of objective mobility experienced by an individual, and subjective mobility as an evaluation of mobility experiences. A brief overview of the main empirical studies in each direction is provided. The article also explores common methods of measuring subjective mobility, such as success, comparing achieved professional status to parental status and living standards. It analyzes the potential of using subjective well-being as an indicator for measuring subjective mobility. Drawing from data collected by an all-Russian survey conducted in 2020 as part of the “Factors of Social Well-being in Changing and Stable Societies” study, the article identifies four types of subjective mobility, each distinguished by the individual perception of mobility experience and a parental well-being assessment. Binary logistic regression models calculated for each mobility type allowed the researchers to determine the influence of different factors on the perception of subjective mobility. The findings corroborated some trends identified in studies based on international data. The conclusion highlights that, for the subjective perception of mobility, the most significant factors are not structural indicators but the assessment of relationships with parents and emotional well-being. This article investigates into the relatively new research area of subjective mobility. It examines existing theoretical approaches to defining and studying subjective mobility, identifying two primary directions: subjective mobility as the consequence of objective mobility experienced by an individual, and subjective mobility as an evaluation of mobility experiences. A brief overview of the main empirical studies in each direction is provided. The article also explores common methods of measuring subjective mobility, such as success, comparing achieved professional status to parental status and living standards. It analyzes the potential of using subjective well-being as an indicator for measuring subjective mobility. Drawing from data collected by an all-Russian survey conducted in 2020 as part of the “Factors of Social Well-being in Changing and Stable Societies” study, the article identifies four types of subjective mobility, each distinguished by the individual perception of mobility experience and a parental well-being assessment. Binary logistic regression models calculated for each mobility type allowed the researchers to determine the influence of different factors on the perception of subjective mobility. The findings corroborated some trends identified in studies based on international data. The conclusion highlights that, for the subjective perception of mobility, the most significant factors are not structural indicators but the assessment of relationships with parents and emotional well-being. This article investigates into the relatively new research area of subjective mobility. It examines existing  theoretical  approaches  to  defining  and  studying  subjective  mobility,  identifying two primary directions: subjective mobility as the consequence of objective mobility experienced by  an  individual,  and  subjective  mobility  as  an  evaluation  of  mobility  experiences. A  brief overview of the main empirical studies in each direction is provided.The article also explores common methods of measuring subjective mobility, such as success, comparing  achieved  professional  status  to  parental  status  and  living  standards.  It  analyzes the potential of using subjective well-being as an indicator for measuring subjective mobility. Drawing from data collected by an all-Russian survey conducted in 2020 as part of the “Factors of Social Well-being in Changing and Stable Societies” study, the article identifies four types of subjective mobility, each distinguished by the individual perception of mobility experience and a parental well-being assessment.Binary logistic regression models calculated for each mobility type allowed the researchers to determine the influence of different factors on the perception of subjective mobility. The findings corroborated  some  trends  identified  in  studies  based  on  international  data.  The  conclusion highlights that, for the subjective perception of mobility, the most significant factors are not structural indicators but the assessment of relationships with parents and emotional well-being.