This paper looks at the inclusion of excluded groups, notably the racial transformation of the South African university system. Both demand-side factors | are qualified black people hired as faculty? | and supply-side factors | are there enough qualified black people who can be hired as faculty? | need to be aligned. Prior evidence suggests that demand and supply both have both a psychological and a structural dimension. Affirmative action-type regulations address the structural dimension of demand, but homophily (a "love for the own") can nonetheless limit the hiring of faculty in white-dominated hiring committees. On the supply side, the weak education system limits the structural supply of quality black potential academics. But the limit...
studies have shown the various factors and types thereof that influence academic success. However, t...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Race Ethnicity and Edu...
An explicit drive to increase research production at South African universities is apparent, but thi...
Because discrimination is systemic, efforts to counter it must also be systemic. The South African c...
This paper reviews demographic shifts in access to higher education in South Africa from the late 19...
In the context of higher education transformation in South Africa, this paper attempts to capture a...
Research on transformation of higher education institutions shows that the underrepresentation, recr...
Recent studies have shown that graduates from historically White universities (HWUs) experience bett...
The South African higher education system has a highly uneven landscape emerging from its apartheid ...
The real and imagined racial differences and similarities between groups of students and staff have ...
Within the complex social dynamics of transformation in South African higher education, increasing a...
Research on transformation of higher education institutions shows that the underrepresentation, recr...
This paper makes a single point: that the goal of institutional diversity falls short of the goal of...
This paper makes a single point: that the goal of institutional diversity falls short of the goal of...
The national program for the development of next and new generation academic professionals (NGAP) ai...
studies have shown the various factors and types thereof that influence academic success. However, t...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Race Ethnicity and Edu...
An explicit drive to increase research production at South African universities is apparent, but thi...
Because discrimination is systemic, efforts to counter it must also be systemic. The South African c...
This paper reviews demographic shifts in access to higher education in South Africa from the late 19...
In the context of higher education transformation in South Africa, this paper attempts to capture a...
Research on transformation of higher education institutions shows that the underrepresentation, recr...
Recent studies have shown that graduates from historically White universities (HWUs) experience bett...
The South African higher education system has a highly uneven landscape emerging from its apartheid ...
The real and imagined racial differences and similarities between groups of students and staff have ...
Within the complex social dynamics of transformation in South African higher education, increasing a...
Research on transformation of higher education institutions shows that the underrepresentation, recr...
This paper makes a single point: that the goal of institutional diversity falls short of the goal of...
This paper makes a single point: that the goal of institutional diversity falls short of the goal of...
The national program for the development of next and new generation academic professionals (NGAP) ai...
studies have shown the various factors and types thereof that influence academic success. However, t...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Race Ethnicity and Edu...
An explicit drive to increase research production at South African universities is apparent, but thi...