Event box

Seminar with Sam Friedman

Born to Rule: The Making and Remaking of the British Elite

With Sam Friedman 

Date: June 2, 2025 from 17.00 -19.00, entrance is open and free

Location: Copenhagen Business School, Kilevej 14 A, 2000 Frederiksberg in Room Ks 43. 

The Organizations, Markets and Governance research group at Department of Organization, CBS, The Danish Sociological Association and The Danish Society for the study of Elites and Power have invited professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science Sam Friedman to give a talk about his groundbreaking book Born to Rule - The Making and Remaking of the British Elite (together with Aaron Reeves)

Born to Rule: The Making and Remaking of the British Elite  
Think of the British elite and familiar caricatures spring to mind. But are today’s power brokers a conservative chumocracy, born to privilege and anointed at Eton and Oxford? Or is a new progressive elite emerging with different values and political instincts? In this talk, based on his new co-authored book (with Aaron Reeves), Born to Rule, Sam Friedman combs through a trove of data in search of an answer, looking at the profiles, interests, and careers of over 125,000 members of the British elite from the late 1890s to today.  
At the heart of the study is the historical database of Who’s Who, but Friedman and Reeves also mined genealogical records, combed through probate data, and interviewed over 200 leading figures from a wide range of backgrounds and professions to uncover who runs Britain, how they think, and what they want. What they found is that there is less movement at the top than we think. Yes, there has been some progress on including women and Black and Asian Brits, but those born into the top 1% are almost just as likely to get into the elite today as they were 125 years ago.  
What has changed is how elites present themselves. Today’s elite pedal hard to convince us they are perfectly ordinary – in the way they tell their back story, express their cultural taste, or articulate their meritocratic legitimacy. And this is logical; they show that there is a strong symbolic market for ordinariness among the British public.  
Why should we care? Because the elites we have affect the politics we get. Born to Rule shows that the family you are born into, and the schools you attend, leave a profound mark on the exercise of power. 
Sam Friedman is Professor of Sociology at LSE and co-author of The Class Ceiling: Why it Pays to be Privileged, and author of Comedy and Distinction: the Cultural Currency of a ‘Good’ Sense of Humour. He is the co-editor of The British Journal of Sociology. 

Date:
Monday 2 June 2025
Time:
17:00 - 19:00
Time Zone:
Central European Time (change)
Categories:
  IOA  

Event Organizer

Nanna Guldager Møller