Racial and gender inequality in economic outcomes, particularly among the college educated, persists throughout U.S. society. Scholars debate whether this inequality stems from differences in human capital (e.g. college selectivity, GPA, major) or employer discrimination on the basis of race and gender. However, limited measures of human capital and the inherent difficulties in measuring discrimination using observational data make determining the cause of these differences in labor market outcomes a difficult endeavor. This research examines employment opportunities for hypothetical graduates of elite top-ranked universities versus less selective institutions. I use an experimental computerized audit design to create matched candidate pair...
Women continue to receive fewer doctoral and first-professional degrees than men, even though women ...
After the landmark Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case in 1954, it would make sense to as...
In a capitalistic society, Americans are socialized to value the earning of money more than anything...
Despite the fact that today, women constitute the majority of higher education graduates, (U.S. Depa...
This study examined whether the demand for more educated science and engineering workers outweighed ...
Do employers prioritize university prestige above an applicant’s skills in the hiring process? To di...
This is a study comparing the black and white graduates of the graduate programs in the School of Ed...
The persistence of wage differences between blacks and whites has provided economists a perplexing t...
This study expands on decades of research by exploring inequities in faculty salaries between gender...
Although access to a postsecondary education has increased exponentially since 1970, access to a bac...
Although access to a postsecondary education has increased exponentially since 1970, access to a bac...
A recent college graduate working as a coffee shop barista, earning minimum wage and carrying thousa...
Although interest in research on persons with disabilities has grown steadily, these individuals con...
This analysis explores bachelor's degrees earned by race and ethnicity, broken down by area of study...
Clearly class is a powerful cross-cutting factor in explaining postsecondary differences among all s...
Women continue to receive fewer doctoral and first-professional degrees than men, even though women ...
After the landmark Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case in 1954, it would make sense to as...
In a capitalistic society, Americans are socialized to value the earning of money more than anything...
Despite the fact that today, women constitute the majority of higher education graduates, (U.S. Depa...
This study examined whether the demand for more educated science and engineering workers outweighed ...
Do employers prioritize university prestige above an applicant’s skills in the hiring process? To di...
This is a study comparing the black and white graduates of the graduate programs in the School of Ed...
The persistence of wage differences between blacks and whites has provided economists a perplexing t...
This study expands on decades of research by exploring inequities in faculty salaries between gender...
Although access to a postsecondary education has increased exponentially since 1970, access to a bac...
Although access to a postsecondary education has increased exponentially since 1970, access to a bac...
A recent college graduate working as a coffee shop barista, earning minimum wage and carrying thousa...
Although interest in research on persons with disabilities has grown steadily, these individuals con...
This analysis explores bachelor's degrees earned by race and ethnicity, broken down by area of study...
Clearly class is a powerful cross-cutting factor in explaining postsecondary differences among all s...
Women continue to receive fewer doctoral and first-professional degrees than men, even though women ...
After the landmark Brown v. Board of Education Supreme Court case in 1954, it would make sense to as...
In a capitalistic society, Americans are socialized to value the earning of money more than anything...