Tag Archives | Social Ties

Inequality and Social Ties: Evidence from 15 U.S. Data Sets

Cristobal Young, Benjamin Cornwell, Barum Park, Nan Feng

Sociological Science May 12, 2025
10.15195/v12.a14


What is the relationship between inequality and social ties? Do personal networks, group memberships, and connections to social resources help level the playing field, or do they reinforce economic disparities? We examine two core empirical issues: the degree of inequality in social ties and their consolidation with income. Using 142,000 person-wave observations from 15 high-quality U.S. data sets, we measure the quantity and quality of social ties and examine their distribution. Our findings show that (1) the Gini coefficient for social ties often exceeds that of income and (2) social ties are concentrated among those with the highest incomes. We introduce an overall inequality–consolidation curve, demonstrating that social ties generally reinforce economic inequality. However, we identify one key exception: there is no class gradient in the use of social ties for job search. These findings contribute to debates about the role of social ties in perpetuating or mitigating inequality.
Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Cristobal Young: Department of Sociology, Cornell University
E-mail: cristobal.young@cornell.edu

Benjamin Cornwell: Department of Sociology, Cornell University
E-mail: btc49@cornell.edu

Barum Park: Department of Sociology, Cornell University
E-mail: b.park@cornell.edu

Nan Feng: Institute for Public Knowledge, New York University
E-mail: nf263@cornell.edu

Acknowledgments: We received valuable comments and suggestions from Kendra Bischoff, Paul DiMaggio, Filiz Garip, Lynn Johnson, Sheela Kennedy, Edward O. Laumann, Vida Maralani, Kelly Musick, Anthony Paik, Landon Schnabel, Kim Weeden, Patricia Young, Erin York Cornwell, as well as participants at seminars at Cornell Sociology, the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association, the Sociological Science Conference, and the Future of the Social Sciences Conference. Tianyao Qu, Zhonghao Wang, and Haowen Zheng provided exceptional research assistance. We thank the Cornell Center for Social Sciences for providing computing resources and the Cornell Center of the Study of Inequality for generous funding.

Supplemental Materials

Reproducibility Package: All code, and all data that can be publicly shared, is available at OSF (https://osf.io/ky4ws/). The package also includes information about requesting access to confidential data sets, such as the Addhealth restricted-use data.

  • Citation: Young, Cristobal, Benjamin Cornwell, Barum Park, Nan Feng. 2025. “Inequality and Social Ties: Evidence from 15 U.S. Data sets” Sociological Science 12: 294-321.
  • Received: September 5, 2024
  • Accepted: March 17, 2025
  • Editors: Arnout van de Rijt, Filiz Garip
  • DOI: 10.15195/v12.a14

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On Elastic Ties: Distance and Intimacy in Social Relationships

Stacy Torres

Sociological Science, April 9, 2019
10.15195/v6.a10


Drawing on five years of ethnographic fieldwork among older adults in a New York City neighborhood, I present empirical data that complement survey approaches to social isolation and push our understanding of social ties beyond weak and strong by analyzing relationships that defy binary classification. Usual survey items would describe these participants as isolated and without social support. When questioned, they minimize neighborhood relationships outside of close friends and family. But ethnographic observations of their social interactions with neighbors reveal the presence of “elastic ties.” By elastic ties, I mean nonstrong, nonweak relations between people who spend hours each day and share intimate details of their lives with those whom they do not consider “confidants.” Nonetheless, they provide each other with the support and practical assistance typically seen in strong-tie relationships. These findings show how people’s accounts may not accurately reflect the character and structure of their social ties. Furthermore, they demonstrate how a single social tie can vary between strong and weak depending on the social situation. Many social ties fall outside weak and strong; they are elastic in allowing elders (and other marginal groups) to connect and secure informal support while maintaining their distance and preserving their autonomy.
Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Stacy Torres: Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco
E-mail: stacy.torres@ucsf.edu

Acknowledgements: I thank Kathleen Gerson, Colin Jerolmack, Lynne Haney, Steven Lukes, Dalton Conley, Ronald Breiger, Anthony Paik, and Claude Fischer for their guidance and feedback on earlier versions of this article. A special thanks to my study participants, who shared their lives with me for several years. Support for data collection and project write-up was funded in part by fellowships from New York University, the American Sociological Association Minority Fellowship Program (cosponsored by Sociologists for Women in Society), the Ford Foundation, and the UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. Publication is made possible in part by support from the UCSF Open Access Publishing Fund.

  • Citation: Torres, Stacy. 2019. “On Elastic Ties: Distance and Intimacy in Social Relationships.” Sociological Science 6: 235-263.
  • Received: November 15, 2018
  • Accepted: February 18, 2019
  • Editors: Jesper Sørensen, Mario Small
  • DOI: 10.15195/v6.a10


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