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Inequality of educational opportunities (IEO) is a recurring topic in both public debate and academic research. This book contributes to the contemporary discussion on IEO with a focus on individual trajectories over the life course. It provides empirical evidence on the magnitude and the mechanisms of IEO in Colombia, a country with extreme, persistent levels of social inequality. Using national administrative databases, the author examines the effect of social origin on academic and labor market outcomes among university graduates. Drawing on a comprehensive theoretical approach to stratification and higher education, this volume discusses how the interaction between family background and segmentation of educational institutions might influence individuals' outcomes. As such, it will appeal to scholars, policy makers, and practitioners with interests in education, social inequality, social policy, higher education research, and international/comparative education.
Education --- Labor Market --- Unequal Opportunities --- Equality --- Sociology --- Educational Inequalities --- Academic Achievement Studies --- Educational Effectiveness Research --- Production Function Studies --- School Effectiveness --- Intergenerational Mobility Studies --- Modeling Studies --- Comparative Studies --- Academic Achievement --- Human Capital Theory --- Rational Choice Theory --- Theory of Industrialism --- Persistent Inequalities --- Bildungsmanagement
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Based on the German case, this open access book highlights the increasing flows of migration and the internationalisation of individual life courses. It analyses the experiences of migration across four central domains - employment and income, partners and families, health and wellbeing, as well as friends and social participation - which potentially have far-reaching consequences for social inequalities and life chances. The book showcases results from an innovative probability sample that is representative of German emigrants who recently moved abroad and remigrants who recently returned from abroad and compares their international experiences with the sedentary population in Germany. Stays abroad, whether temporary or permanently, have become the new normal for increasing numbers of people from highly developed welfare states. Unnoticed from mainstream migration studies, these countries are today not only major immigration countries but also important sources of international mobility. By providing an empirically founded prism of the global lives of German migrants, this book is a valuable resource for students and researchers of migration, social inequality, and the life course and provides practitioners with insights into these regularly overlooked aspects of international migration.
Economic sociology --- Migration. Refugees --- Physiology: reproduction & development. Ages of life --- levenscyclus --- migratie (mensen) --- sociale economie --- Germans --- #SBIB:39A6 --- Germans in foreign countries --- Etniciteit / Migratiebeleid en -problemen --- Germany --- Emigration and immigration. --- Migration, immigration & emigration --- Sociology --- Political economy --- Migration --- Life course --- Population Economics --- Human Migration --- Open access --- German Emigration and Remigration Panel Study (GERPS) --- German emigrants and return migrants --- Employment and income --- Well-being and life satisfaction --- Family and Partnership --- Social inclusion and participation --- Internal migrants --- Non-migrants --- Motives of migration through the life course --- Migration intentions --- Labor market integration --- Individual career consequences of migration --- Reproduction of social inequalities --- Intergenerational mobility --- International migration of couples --- Family formation --- Physical and mental health status --- Social status of migrants --- International migration across the life course --- Population & demography
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