The UK government has expressed a desire to increase social mobility, with policies to help achieve this aim focused on reducing inequalities in educational attainment. This paper draws together established and new information about the contribution that higher education can make to social mobility using a life-course approach, considering differences by family background in terms of university attendance and achievement, as well as occupation and earnings following graduation. We find substantial socio-economic differences at each stage. Young people from poorer backgrounds are, on average, less likely to go to university than their richer peers. Even among the selected group who do go to university, they are less likely to attend the high...
This paper provides the first quantitative analysis on ‘first in family’ (FiF) university graduates ...
A university education has long been seen as the gateway to upward social mobility for individuals f...
Universities around the world are attempting to increase the diversity of their student population. ...
The UK government has expressed a desire to increase social mobility, with policies to help achieve ...
Education—and in particular higher education—is often regarded as a route to social mobility. For th...
Education—and in particular higher education—is often regarded as a route to social mobility. For th...
Much research and policy attention has been on socio-economic gaps in participation at university, ...
European higher education systems in the last few decades have been in a period of intensive quantit...
Most research on social inequalities in higher education (HE) graduates’ labour market outcomes has ...
At a time when the UK may slowly be emerging out of what, for many in higher education, has been a p...
In this paper we explore changes over time in higher education (HE) participation and attainment bet...
Analysis of data on school leavers in the UK points to considerable inequality in access to higher e...
This paper flatly contradicts the common view that anyone can make it in modern Britain. Indeed, rat...
The literature on social stratification has paid considerable attention to whether and to what exten...
We investigate the relationship between social origin, postgraduate degree attainment, and occupatio...
This paper provides the first quantitative analysis on ‘first in family’ (FiF) university graduates ...
A university education has long been seen as the gateway to upward social mobility for individuals f...
Universities around the world are attempting to increase the diversity of their student population. ...
The UK government has expressed a desire to increase social mobility, with policies to help achieve ...
Education—and in particular higher education—is often regarded as a route to social mobility. For th...
Education—and in particular higher education—is often regarded as a route to social mobility. For th...
Much research and policy attention has been on socio-economic gaps in participation at university, ...
European higher education systems in the last few decades have been in a period of intensive quantit...
Most research on social inequalities in higher education (HE) graduates’ labour market outcomes has ...
At a time when the UK may slowly be emerging out of what, for many in higher education, has been a p...
In this paper we explore changes over time in higher education (HE) participation and attainment bet...
Analysis of data on school leavers in the UK points to considerable inequality in access to higher e...
This paper flatly contradicts the common view that anyone can make it in modern Britain. Indeed, rat...
The literature on social stratification has paid considerable attention to whether and to what exten...
We investigate the relationship between social origin, postgraduate degree attainment, and occupatio...
This paper provides the first quantitative analysis on ‘first in family’ (FiF) university graduates ...
A university education has long been seen as the gateway to upward social mobility for individuals f...
Universities around the world are attempting to increase the diversity of their student population. ...