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showing 10 items of 8586 documents

Between a ‘student abroad’ and ‘being from Latvia’: inequalities of access, prestige, and foreign-earned cultural capital

2017

This paper visualises tertiary-level students who study abroad as simultaneously both international students and members of an emerging diaspora. Coming from a country (Latvia) which is peripheral and relatively poor by European standards, students go abroad for multiple reasons not necessarily directly connected with study (e.g. family reasons, labour migration); yet their evolving diasporic status is instrumentalised by the Latvian government which wants them to return and contribute to the country’s development. Based on 27 in-depth interviews with Latvian students and graduates who have studied abroad, our analysis focuses on three interlinked dimensions of inequality: access to educati…

Economic growthHigher educationbusiness.industryPrestige05 social sciences0507 social and economic geography050301 educationLatvianHomelandStudy abroadCultural capitallanguage.human_languageDilemmaGlobalizationArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)languageSociologySocial sciencebusiness050703 geography0503 educationDemography
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Social class and university graduates’ overqualification: testing two mediated relationships

2018

[EN] University graduates’ overqualification (i.e., having more education, qualification and/or skills than one’s job requires) has important negative consequences. However, much less is known about its antecedents. This represents an important gap in the literature. In order to fill this gap, the goal of this study is to test a mediational model on the antecedents of university graduates’ overqualification (OQ). We posit that social class is negatively related to OQ through two mediational links: a) via social capital, and b) via social capital and tolerance towards OQ. The results obtained in a sample of 144 university graduates provided support for the second mediational link, so that so…

Economic growthHigher educationbusiness.industryTeachingEducational systemsOverqualificationHigher EducationSocial classSocial classTolerance towards overqualificationSocial capitalWork (electrical)Agency (sociology)LearningOverqualificationChristian ministrySociologybusinessEducational systemsSocial capitalProceedings of the 4th International Conference on Higher Education Advances (HEAd'18)
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Are Universities Ready to Face the Knowledge-Based Economy?

2002

It is generally agreed that the two main functions of universities are to transmit high level knowledge and to produce new knowledge. For centuries, these two functions were performed in a context in which only a small share of the relevant age cohort attended higher education institutions. After the Second World War, this context changed radically and higher education began to face more or less continuous growth. This has led to the situation that, in the developed economies, more than 40 per cent of the younger generation now attend third-level institutions (cf. Teichler, 2000).

Economic growthHigher educationbusiness.industry[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education4. EducationKnowledge economy[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/Education05 social sciencesWorld War IIHigh educationFace (sociological concept)Context (language use)[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance050905 science studiesHuman capitalEnseignement supérieurUniversitéPolitical science0502 economics and business0509 other social sciences[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinancebusinessComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSÉconomie de la connaissance050203 business & management
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Rethinking the Finance of Post-Compulsory Education

2010

Throughout the world, the finance of education is in serious crisis. The crisis of educational finance is not limited to the problem of meeting the obligations of societies to provide some minimum amount of compulsory education for their students. This minimum does not assure the preparation of an appropriately trained labour force in a world that is increasingly technicological and in which a competitive economy requires the remplacement of traditional production processes with others based on sophisticated labour and capital. The rapid growth of post-compulsory systems of education is no longer a luxury, but a necessity for industrialization and economic development.

Economic growthHigher educationmedia_common.quotation_subject[SHS.EDU]Humanities and Social Sciences/Education[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/EducationDiversification (finance)0211 other engineering and technologiesDeveloping countryPost compulsory02 engineering and technologyFunding MechanismDiversification (marketing strategy)Human capitalEnseignement post-obligatoireEnseignement supérieurUnit (housing)EducationState (polity)Educational financeOrder (exchange)0502 economics and businessEconomics050602 political science & public administration050207 economicsEducation economicsmedia_commonFinance021110 strategic defence & security studiesbusiness.industry4. Education05 social sciences1. No poverty050301 educationPublic institutionPrivate sector0506 political scienceFinancement de l'enseignementResource allocationBusinessCost of living0503 educationDeveloped country050203 business & management
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Participation in job-related lifelong learning among well-educated employees in the Nordic countries

2016

The purpose of this study was to explore participation in job-related lifelong learning (LLL) among well-educated mature workers and compare it across four Nordic countries. Although this group generally is very active in LLL, the centrality of knowledge work in society, rapid pace of skills-renewal and rising learning demands for all qualifications levels, necessitates a better understanding of the patterns and factors affecting their skill development. The paper builds on theories of learning motivation, human capital and workplace learning. Data from the Survey of Adult Skills (PIAAC) by the OECD were used. In addition to high participation rates, systematic level differences in particip…

Economic growthHigher educationmedia_common.quotation_subjecteducationtertiary educationLifelong learninglifelong learningHuman capitalLiteracyEducationWorkplace learningPIAAC0502 economics and businessta516Life-span and Life-course Studiesmedia_commonbusiness.industryelinikäinen oppiminen05 social sciences050301 educationSkill developmentEducational attainmentNordic countrieskorkea-asteen koulutusWell-beingDemographic economicsPsychologybusiness0503 education050203 business & managementInternational Journal of Lifelong Education
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Getting support in polarized societies: Income, social networks, and socioeconomic context

2013

AbstractThis paper explores how unequal resources and social and economic polarization affects the size of social networks and their use to access resources. We argue that individual resource position generates divergent expectations with regard to the impact of polarization on the size of networks on one hand, and their usefulness for accessing resources on the other. Social and economic polarization encourages reliance on informal networks, but those at the bottom of the social structure are forced to rely on more extensive networks than the wealthy to compensate for their isolated and underprivileged position. At the same time, social and economic polarization limits the resources the po…

Economic growthInequalitySociology and Political Sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectPoison controlInternational Social Survey ProgrammeEducationSocial supportSocial supportEconomic inequalitySurveys and QuestionnairesPolarizationEconomicsHumansSocial position10. No inequalityPovertySocioeconomic statusCommunismmedia_commonPostcommunistPublic economicsPolarization (politics)Australia1. No povertySouth AmericaUnited StatesEuropeSocial ClassSocioeconomic FactorsInequality8. Economic growthIncomeSocial CapitalNetworksSocial Science Research
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Is ICT the Key to Development?

2010

Using panel data for 52 developed and developing countries over the period 1998-2006, this article examines the links between information and communication technology diffusion and human development. We conducted a panel regression analysis of the investments per capita in healthcare, education and information and communication technology against human development index scores. Using a quantile regression approach, our findings suggest that changes in healthcare, education and information and communication technology provision have a stronger impact on human development index scores for less developed than for highly developed countries. Furthermore, at lower levels of development education…

Economic growthInformation Systems and ManagementPublic economicsStrategy and ManagementDeveloping countryManagement Science and Operations ResearchHuman development (humanity)Computer Science ApplicationsQuantile regressionInformation and Communications TechnologyPer capitaEconomicsHuman Development IndexBusiness and International ManagementDeveloped countryPanel dataJournal of Global Information Management (JGIM)
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Argentina’s Economic Development and Life Satisfaction Revisited – 1984–2012

2014

At the end of 1983, Argentina returned to democracy. Between 1983 and 2012, Argentina brought better economic and development results as wells as an improvement in the levels of happiness and life satisfaction. Although the macroeconomic cycle was characterized by high volatility, the country GDP per capita was 74 % higher in 2012 compared to 1983, implying an average annual growth rate of 1.9 %, much higher than the average Latin American country. Poverty and income distribution as well as health and education ones notably improved after time intervals of decadence.

Economic growthLatin AmericansPovertyIncome distributionAnnual growth ratemedia_common.quotation_subjectDevelopment economicsPer capitaHappinessEconomicsLife satisfactionEasterlin paradoxmedia_common
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The Role of Culture in Regional Development Work — Changes and Tensions

2015

A worldwide trend in the integration of culture into regional development strategies has been taking place since the 1990s. This is a trend in which towns and cities have adopted culture-led development strategies in the hope of strengthening their competitive position (Miles and Paddison, 2005: 833–839). In China culture has even been regarded as a significant resource in village development strategies (Oakes, 2006: 13–37). The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) report Culture and Local Development (2005) recommends the strengthening of communities’ cultural capital through education and work practice, as this is believed to have a beneficial effect on local and r…

Economic growthResource (biology)regional development workCultural capitalCultural turnEconomic cooperationRegional developmentWork (electrical)kulttuuriPolitical sciencePosition (finance)aluekehitysrole of cultureChina
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Market trends in Spanish higher education

1997

Abstract Higher education in Spain broke away from its close dependency on the State in the last decade. In this paper we analyze the steps undertaken by the Spanish higher education system which has allowed market influences to grow in recent years. We analyze the historical framework and legal changes which have facilitated market trends in higher education. We consider the influence of these market trends on the financial and organizational structure of universities. We conclude that, though the steps are still hesitant, market-like elements are increasingly affecting every aspect of higher education life.

Economic growthSociology and Political ScienceHigher educationbusiness.industryHigher education policyCapitalismSpanish higher educationEducationTrend analysisEnterprise systemDevelopment economicsAccountabilityHigher education policyEconomicsOrganizational structureEducation policybusiness
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