This paper reviews the recent research on the determinants of the educational attainment among the children of immigrants born in Canada and the United States, also known as the second generation. The focus is on the gap in educational attainment between the second and third-and-higher generations (the children of domestic-born parents), as well as the intergenerational transmission of education between immigrants and their children. On average, the children of immigrants have educational levels significantly above those of their counterparts in Canada with Canadian-born parents. In the U.S., educational levels are roughly the same between these two groups. In both countries, conditional on the educational attainment of the parents and loca...
Education is a proven determinate of one’s income. From a policy point of view an important question...
One in five U.S. residents under the age of 18 has at least one foreign-born parent. Given the large...
This paper examines relationships between the resources available to immigrant families and the amou...
This paper examines the differences of educational attainment levels of adult children of immigrants...
This research exploits the uniquely rich Youth in Transition Survey to investigate access to post-se...
Using the 2002 Ethnic Diversity Survey, this article examines the ethnic differences in university e...
How well-off are second-generation immigrants in the US, Canada, and Australia? In this study, we ex...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical analysis of the largely ignored issue of the determi...
We analyze the intergenerational education mobility of Canadian men and women born to immigrants usi...
This thesis explores several issues in the adaptation process of immigrants and their children in Ca...
The educational and labor market outcomes of the first, first-and-a-half (1.5), second, and third g...
International audienceWe use probit analysis of national datasets in the United States, Canada, Engl...
Previous research finds that the children of immigrants, or the second generation, earn at least as ...
This paper analyzes the effect of culture – measured by aggregate levels of an immigrant parent’s ho...
Understanding how immigrants ’ children form educational expectations may yield insights into the ca...
Education is a proven determinate of one’s income. From a policy point of view an important question...
One in five U.S. residents under the age of 18 has at least one foreign-born parent. Given the large...
This paper examines relationships between the resources available to immigrant families and the amou...
This paper examines the differences of educational attainment levels of adult children of immigrants...
This research exploits the uniquely rich Youth in Transition Survey to investigate access to post-se...
Using the 2002 Ethnic Diversity Survey, this article examines the ethnic differences in university e...
How well-off are second-generation immigrants in the US, Canada, and Australia? In this study, we ex...
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical analysis of the largely ignored issue of the determi...
We analyze the intergenerational education mobility of Canadian men and women born to immigrants usi...
This thesis explores several issues in the adaptation process of immigrants and their children in Ca...
The educational and labor market outcomes of the first, first-and-a-half (1.5), second, and third g...
International audienceWe use probit analysis of national datasets in the United States, Canada, Engl...
Previous research finds that the children of immigrants, or the second generation, earn at least as ...
This paper analyzes the effect of culture – measured by aggregate levels of an immigrant parent’s ho...
Understanding how immigrants ’ children form educational expectations may yield insights into the ca...
Education is a proven determinate of one’s income. From a policy point of view an important question...
One in five U.S. residents under the age of 18 has at least one foreign-born parent. Given the large...
This paper examines relationships between the resources available to immigrant families and the amou...