How Socio-Economic Background Shapes Academia

 [[{“value”:”We explore how socio-economic background shapes academia, collecting the largest dataset of U.S. academics’ backgrounds and research output. Individuals from poorer backgrounds have been severely underrepresented for seven decades, especially in humanities and elite universities. Father’s occupation predicts professors’ discipline choice and, thus, the direction of research. While we find no differences in the average
The post How Socio-Economic Background Shapes Academia appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.”}]] 

We explore how socio-economic background shapes academia, collecting the largest dataset of U.S. academics’ backgrounds and research output. Individuals from poorer backgrounds have been severely underrepresented for seven decades, especially in humanities and elite universities. Father’s occupation predicts professors’ discipline choice and, thus, the direction of research. While we find no differences in the average number of publications, academics from poorer backgrounds are both more likely to not publish and to have outstanding publication records. Academics from poorer backgrounds introduce more novel scientific concepts, but are less likely to receive recognition, as measured by citations, Nobel Prize nominations, and awards.

That is from a new NBER working paper by Ran Abramitzky, Lena Greska, Santiago Pérez, Joseph Price, Carlo Schwarz & Fabian Waldinger.

The post How Socio-Economic Background Shapes Academia appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

 Data Source, Economics, Education, Science, Uncategorized 


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