Scientific elitism is divisive, benefiting the elite, and excluding those with less privilege. It is also persistent, supported by a broad pattern of social closure that excludes new members. The more elite are advantaged as evidenced in prestige-based academic hiring networks (Burris, 2004; Clauset et al., 2015; Wapman et al., 2022), and collaboration and citation behaviors (Kozlowski et al., 2022; Nielsen, 2021; Rubin & O’Connor, 2018). Exclusion brings consequences that dimmish the advancement and impacts of science, from reduction in topic and methodological diversity (Nielsen et al., 2017) and novel discoveries (Hofstra et al., 2020). While “scientific elites” are often defined by their PhD institution (Wapman et al., 2022), productiv...
[Extract] Doctoral snobbery exists. It is a thing (Parnell, 2016). It is an extension of “academic s...
The advancement of underrepresented minority and women PhD students to elite postdoctoral and facult...
We look into the question whether heterogeneity stemming from research orientation, gender, or disci...
Despite the special role of tenure-track faculty in society, training future researchers and produci...
The Class Ceiling in Doctoral Education: Social Class in the Formation of Scholars is a study of the...
Who becomes an elite member and why? As we know from the sociology of elites that elite status corre...
A national sample of PhD-trained scientists completed training, accepted subsequent employment in ac...
The study of elites is enjoying a revival at a time of increasing economic inequality. Sociologists ...
Placement in prestigious research institutions for STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathe...
Thesis (Ed.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Only a handful of empirical studies have examined the ...
© The Author(s) 2018. Graduate outcomes – including rates of employment and earnings – are marked by...
Academic hiring, like all hiring processes, is a selection process that distinguishes candidates fro...
This dissertation examines socialization practices in the academy in three separate studies. The fir...
The small base of extant research on doctoral admissions suggests a paradox between principles of me...
To remain globally competitive in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), we must ...
[Extract] Doctoral snobbery exists. It is a thing (Parnell, 2016). It is an extension of “academic s...
The advancement of underrepresented minority and women PhD students to elite postdoctoral and facult...
We look into the question whether heterogeneity stemming from research orientation, gender, or disci...
Despite the special role of tenure-track faculty in society, training future researchers and produci...
The Class Ceiling in Doctoral Education: Social Class in the Formation of Scholars is a study of the...
Who becomes an elite member and why? As we know from the sociology of elites that elite status corre...
A national sample of PhD-trained scientists completed training, accepted subsequent employment in ac...
The study of elites is enjoying a revival at a time of increasing economic inequality. Sociologists ...
Placement in prestigious research institutions for STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathe...
Thesis (Ed.D.)--University of Washington, 2019Only a handful of empirical studies have examined the ...
© The Author(s) 2018. Graduate outcomes – including rates of employment and earnings – are marked by...
Academic hiring, like all hiring processes, is a selection process that distinguishes candidates fro...
This dissertation examines socialization practices in the academy in three separate studies. The fir...
The small base of extant research on doctoral admissions suggests a paradox between principles of me...
To remain globally competitive in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), we must ...
[Extract] Doctoral snobbery exists. It is a thing (Parnell, 2016). It is an extension of “academic s...
The advancement of underrepresented minority and women PhD students to elite postdoctoral and facult...
We look into the question whether heterogeneity stemming from research orientation, gender, or disci...