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Haller, William; Portes, Alejandro; Lynch, Scott M. – Social Forces, 2011
This article responds to the Alba, Kasinitz and Waters' commentary on the authors' article. The authors state that not all kids are doing "all right," and the substantial number at risk of social and economic stagnation or downward mobility looms as a significant social problem. They contend it is true that right-wing commentators may pick on…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Acculturation, Parent Child Relationship, Social Problems
Clark, Rob – Social Forces, 2010
World-system scholars have traditionally emphasized the stability of the core/periphery hierarchy. However, prior network studies employing both categorical and continuous measures of world-system position reveal substantial mobility across time, whereby a number of developing states have become more integrated in the world economy over the past…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Economic Progress, Human Capital, Economic Impact
Hall, Matthew; Greenman, Emily; Farkas, George – Social Forces, 2010
This article employs a unique method of inferring the legal status of Mexican immigrants in the Survey of Income and Program Participation to offer new evidence of the role of legal authorization in the United States on workers' wages. We estimate wage trajectories for four groups: documented Mexican immigrants, undocumented Mexican immigrants,…
Descriptors: Salary Wage Differentials, Human Capital, Mexican Americans, Immigrants
Clark, Rob – Social Forces, 2011
From 1980 to 2000, child labor rates across the world fell by more than a quarter. Much of the explanation for this decrease resides in development processes broadly associated with the demographic transition. Net of these internal dynamics, however, globalization may also have played a role. Previous studies have examined the effect of trade and…
Descriptors: Child Labor, Global Approach, Conflict, International Organizations
Dwyer, Rachel E.; McCloud, Laura; Hodson, Randy – Social Forces, 2012
The goal of "college-for-all" in the United States has been pursued in an environment of rising tuition, stagnant grant aid and already strapped family budgets with the gap filled by college loans. College students are thus facing increasing levels of debt as they seek to develop their human capital and improve their career options. Debt…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Income, Debt (Financial), Risk
Fullerton, Andrew S.; Villemez, Wayne J. – Social Forces, 2011
Several recent studies across the social sciences show that the spatial agglomeration of employment in a local labor market benefits both firms and workers in terms of better firm performance and higher wages. Drawing from the organizational ecology perspective, we argue that workers receive higher wages in large industrial clusters and urban…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Urban Areas, Geographic Distribution, Social Environment
Haller, William; Portes, Alejandro; Lynch, Scott M. – Social Forces, 2011
We summarize prior theories on the adaptation process of the contemporary immigrant second generation as a prelude to presenting additive and interactive models showing the impact of family variables, school contexts and academic outcomes on the process. For this purpose, we regress indicators of educational and occupational achievement in early…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Acculturation, Parent Child Relationship, Longitudinal Studies
Augustine, Jennifer March; Cavanagh, Shannon E.; Crosnoe, Robert – Social Forces, 2009
The social and human capital that educational attainment provides women enables them to better navigate their children's passages through school. In this study, we examine a key mechanism in this intergenerational process: mothers' selection of early child care. Analyses of the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development revealed that…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Social Capital, Educational Attainment, Mothers
Parrado, Emilio A.; Kandel, William A. – Social Forces, 2010
We analyze the relationship between Hispanic population growth and changes in U.S. rural income inequality from 1990 through 2000. Applying comparative approaches used for urban areas we disentangle Hispanic population growth's contribution to inequality by comparing and statistically modeling changes in the family income Gini coefficient across…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Family Income, Population Trends, Population Growth
Kanas, Agnieszka; van Tubergen, Frank – Social Forces, 2009
This study examines the economic returns to schooling acquired in the country of origin and the country of destination. It uses large-scale survey data on Turkish, Moroccan, Surinamese and Antillean immigrants in the Netherlands, which contain direct measures of pre- and post migration schooling. It is studied whether the returns to origin-country…
Descriptors: Labor Market, Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Economic Impact
Hwang, Sean-Shong; Xi, Juan – Social Forces, 2008
This study evaluates the empirical merits of a multilevel model of English language proficiency among immigrants. The model represents a synthesis of Blau's theory of intergroup relations and the human capital model. Hypotheses derived from the model were tested using multilevel ordinal logistic analysis with individual and aggregate data from…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Intergroup Relations, Immigrants, English (Second Language)
Shauman, Kimberlee A.; Noonan, Mary C. – Social Forces, 2007
Empirical analyses of sex differences in the career consequences of family migration have focused on adjudicating between the human capital and the gender-role explanations but have ignored the potential influence of gender inequality in the structure of the labor market. In this paper we estimate conditional difference-in-difference models with…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Migration, Human Capital, Sex Role
Mendenhall, Ruby; Kalil, Ariel; Spindel, Laurel J.; Hart, Cassandra M. D. – Social Forces, 2008
We use a life course framework to examine how the "new risk economy" has left middle-age professionals, managers and executives more vulnerable to job loss and unemployment despite high levels of human capital. Using in-depth qualitative data from 77 recently-unemployed white-collar workers, we examine perceptions of macro-economic…
Descriptors: White Collar Occupations, Human Capital, Coping, Job Layoff
Kesler, Christel – Social Forces, 2006
I examine patterns of joblessness among immigrant men and women from 33 countries of origin now living in Britain, Germany and Sweden. Access to welfare, access to the labor market, job segregation and institutional support for women's employment define distinct policy configurations in these three destinations. Findings show that gaps in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Females, Labor Market, Immigration
Gerber, Theodore P.; Mayorova, Olga – Social Forces, 2006
We examine how the shift from state socialism affects gender inequality in the labor market using multivariate models of employment exit, employment entry, job mobility and new job quality for 3,580 Russian adults from 1991 through 1997. Gender differences changed in a complex fashion. Relative to men, women gained greater access to employment,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Occupational Mobility, Labor Market, Human Capital
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