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simple picture in which obtaining credentials from elite educational institutions was
the only way of entering fi
nancial services work in the City of London. Such caution
is particularly important given the marked changes in the nature of elite fi
nancial
labor markets and work in the City of London that have occurred since much of the
literature on “ gentlemanly capitalism” was written in the 1980s and 1990s. Of par-
ticular importance for my focus on investment banking labor markets in this chapter
are the changes associated with fi
nancial services work during the period of rapid-
fi
nance- led growth and innovation in the 2000s (Engelen, Konings, & Fernandez,
2010 ; Froud, Johal, Leaver, & Williams, 2006 ). Alongside the growth of new fi nan-
cial products, particularly securitization requiring greater technical competency and
quantitative skills, this period saw elite fi
nancial labor markets in London expand
beyond employment in merchant and investment banks to include new forms of
fi
nancial intermediation offered by actors including private equity fi rms, hedge
funds, and sovereign wealth funds (Folkman, Froud, Johal, & Williams, 2007 ;
Wójcik, 2011 ). The related diversifi
cation and growth in elite fi
nancial labor meant
that the old-school-network forms of recruitment based on educational background
could no longer provide the number of elites demanded by fi
nancial labor markets
(Leyshon & Thrift, 1997 ), suggesting changes in the relationship between education
and elite fi
nancial work. In particular, these developments indicate that research
needs to focus not only on the relationship between educational background and
fi nancial elites, but also on the ways in which education, including that undertaken
after a fi
rst undergraduate degree, was important in securing entry into elite fi
nan-
cial labor markets and inculcating individuals into the required skills, competencies,
and new forms of embodied and cultural capital demanded by the changing nature
of the City of London. These concerns form the basis of the rest of this chapter, in
which I draw on the case of early- career investment bankers in examining the inter-
section between postgraduate education and everyday socioeconomic practice in
the City in order to better understand the role of education in inculcating elites into
particular working environments and its geographical implications for those per-
sons often assumed to be globally mobile fi
nancial elites.
Postgraduate Education and Legitimate Elite Financial Practice
To address these concerns, I turn to a set of arguments made by Bourdieu (1980/
1990 ,
1989/
1996 ) concerning everyday socioeconomic practice , to his work on doxa—an
idea still not widely developed in relation to education (although, see also
Faulconbridge & Hall, 2014 ). In so doing, my analysis draws on the wider interest
in normalized practice within socioeconomic life as it relates to processes of learn-
ing and the reproduction of practices in geographically specifi
c ways (Amin &
Cohendet, 2004 ; Wenger, 1998 ). For Bourdieu, assumptions and understandings
about appropriate everyday practice in any given context, or doxa, strongly infl
u-
ence an individual’s actions and thoughts . This insight is important for the argu-
ments in this chapter for two main reasons. First, the concept of doxa suggests that
S. Hall
zurück zum
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