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level (i.e., beyond bachelor’s degree) represents an important means by which early-
career fi
nancial elites are inculcated into the meanings and competencies associated
with normalized, legitimated business practices in London and into the corporate
culture of their employing fi
rm.
I suggest that these forms of education, alongside the more widely studied forms
of educational background, have important implications for both the spatial and
social mobility of fi nancial elites. My approach advances understandings of the spa-
tial mobility (or otherwise) of fi
nancial elites. In this respect work on elites has more
generally often labeled them as, for example, a transnational capitalist class (Sklair,
2001 ) or global elites (Castells, 1996 ). These labels, and the discourses that sur-
round them, suggest a highly mobile group of topologically linked individuals who
are only loosely embedded in topographical space while being situated within par-
ticular geographical locations, cities, or regions. However, by focusing on the role
of education in elite formation, I suggest that elites combine elements of both topo-
logical mobility and connectedness with topographical specifi
city because their
working practices and careers are shaped in part by the still largely national educa-
tional systems in which they are produced and the distinctive working cultures asso-
ciated with different, place-based economies—the international fi
nancial centers in
the case of the fi nancial elites I study here. Meanwhile, I suggest that socially the
case of fi
nance demonstrates how many of the networks created through postgradu-
ate education continued to be structured along social lines. In particular, mobility
into and within elite fi
nancial labor markets remains comparatively limited to an
educational and occupational elite, in spite of the widely held view that the growing
importance of postgraduate education signaled the rise of a more meritocratic global
economy—and City of London in particular—where individuals can succeed if they
invest appropriately in their human capital (Becker, 1994 ). Taken together, I there-
fore argue that postgraduate education is an important but hitherto comparatively
overlooked element in creating fi
nancial elites who combine elements of topologi-
cal fi
nancial networks inseparable from the topographical dimensions of socioeco-
nomic practice in fi
nancial services.
I develop these arguments over four further sections. In the next section, I exam-
ine how work on the role of educational background, particularly in the sociology
of education, can be developed to provide a fuller understanding of the role of ongo-
ing education in shaping socioeconomic practice within elite labor markets. I then
introduce the different elements of the postgraduate landscape as they pertain to
fi nancial elites working in investment banking in the City of London. In the fi nal
substantive section of the chapter, I consider the spatial implications of this ongoing
education for a group of early- career fi
nancial elites employed by investment banks
often assumed to be unproblematically transnational and highly geographically
mobile. I conclude by refl
ecting on the implications of this argument for work on
the geographies of elites more generally and on their spatial and social (im)
mobility. S. Hall
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Buch Knowledge and Networks"
Knowledge and Networks
- Titel
- Knowledge and Networks
- Autoren
- Johannes Glückler
- Emmanuel Lazega
- Ingmar Hammer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Ort
- Cham
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-45023-0
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 390
- Schlagwörter
- Human Geography, Innovation/Technology Management, Economic Geography, Knowledge, Discourse
- Kategorie
- Technik