This paper considers for the first time whether there is school-type homogamy, and whether for women there are significant advantages from private schooling as a consequence of school-type homogamy. Its focus is Britain, where a private education is associated with substantial labour market advantages and where access is socially exclusive. We find that privately educated women are 7 percentage points more likely than observably similar state-educated women to marry privately educated men. Privately educated married women have husbands who earn 15% higher pay, according to the BHPS-UKHLS panel (20% at age 42, according to the British Cohort Study). Causation is not established and considerable caution would be needed if interpreting these a...
Policy discourse surrounding Britain’s unusually well-resourced private schools surrounds their char...
Do students benefit from compulsory schooling? In an important article, Oreopoulos (2006) studied th...
An important axis of inequality in Britain is the private/state school divide. The success of privat...
This paper considers for the first time whether there is school-type homogamy, and whether for women...
Despite its relatively small size, the private school sector plays a prominent role in British socie...
Despite its relatively small size, the private school sector plays a prominent role in British socie...
It is widely believed that the growth in women’s educational attainment and their increasing labour ...
Research by Lindsey Macmillan and Anna Vignoles indicates that even when comparing similarly high ac...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
Despite its relatively small size, the private school sector plays a prominent role in British socie...
Though a relative small part of the school sector, private schools have an important role in British...
In a longitudinal sample from Britain, we tested if attending private, fee-charging schools rather t...
Following the theory of educational systems as marriage markets (Blossfeld & Timm, 2003), it is ofte...
Despite the intuitive notion that educational homogamy matters for the distribution of economic reso...
In a search for determinants of societal levels of income inequality, scholars have suggested that h...
Policy discourse surrounding Britain’s unusually well-resourced private schools surrounds their char...
Do students benefit from compulsory schooling? In an important article, Oreopoulos (2006) studied th...
An important axis of inequality in Britain is the private/state school divide. The success of privat...
This paper considers for the first time whether there is school-type homogamy, and whether for women...
Despite its relatively small size, the private school sector plays a prominent role in British socie...
Despite its relatively small size, the private school sector plays a prominent role in British socie...
It is widely believed that the growth in women’s educational attainment and their increasing labour ...
Research by Lindsey Macmillan and Anna Vignoles indicates that even when comparing similarly high ac...
To what extent and why do social origins matter for access to higher education, including access to ...
Despite its relatively small size, the private school sector plays a prominent role in British socie...
Though a relative small part of the school sector, private schools have an important role in British...
In a longitudinal sample from Britain, we tested if attending private, fee-charging schools rather t...
Following the theory of educational systems as marriage markets (Blossfeld & Timm, 2003), it is ofte...
Despite the intuitive notion that educational homogamy matters for the distribution of economic reso...
In a search for determinants of societal levels of income inequality, scholars have suggested that h...
Policy discourse surrounding Britain’s unusually well-resourced private schools surrounds their char...
Do students benefit from compulsory schooling? In an important article, Oreopoulos (2006) studied th...
An important axis of inequality in Britain is the private/state school divide. The success of privat...