Geraldine Van Bueren, professor of international human rights law at Queen Mary University of London, spent her infancy in the east London borough of Hackney in the days when, as she puts it, nobody pronounced the “h”. Her father, later a taxi driver, worked in local factories, and her mother was a bookkeeper at Smithfield meat market. Though she doesn’t have the accent, she is a cockney, born within the sound of Bow Bells.
Food for thought.
. Nonsense! Academics are also working, they are not lazy! WilbyPeter .
Yes
Most academics make less than a plumber. So going from a working class childhood to academia is an example of downward mobility.
By being in a certain job you are given a label by the Census A,B,C etc. In Wales, traditionally, fewer are more than one generation from being in manual employment. In return, the country does not suffer from the class divide as pertains in southern England.
USA Ph.D. here: Mum was a registered nurse (when nursing was a trade, not a profession) and my stepfather was an auto worker. (And my family tree is full of British coal miners who emigrated to the USA to live the American Dream -- by digging more coal.)
most poor people stay poor because they want to appear rich
She’s not working class.
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