Overeducation: incidence, persistence and institutional differences across countries: the influence of field of study and social origin on graduates' overeducation risk

This dissertation studies overeducation incidence and persistence among graduates from different fields of study and social origin from a social stratification standpoint. Empirical research has shown that overeducation probability varies across graduates from different fields of study and social or...

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Bibliographic Details
Author: Capsada-Munsech, Queralt
Format: doctoral thesis
Status:Published version
Publication Date:2016
Country:España
Institution:CBUC, CESCA
Repository:TDR. Tesis Doctorales en Red
OAI Identifier:oai:www.tdx.cat:10803/399989
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10803/399989
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Overeducation
Social stratification
Field of study
Graduates
School-to-work transitions
Sobreeducació
Estratificació social
Camp d’estudi
Graduats unviersitaris
Transició dels estudis al treball
316
Description
Summary:This dissertation studies overeducation incidence and persistence among graduates from different fields of study and social origin from a social stratification standpoint. Empirical research has shown that overeducation probability varies across graduates from different fields of study and social origin, but the relevance of social background in predicting overeducation might differ depending on the field of study of graduation. This research explores the (in)existence of the unevenly distributed effect of social origin on overeducation probability across fields of study from a cross-sectional, cross-national and longitudinal perspective. The dissertation is structured in three empirical articles, preceded by an introduction and a methodological chapter discussing overeducation measurement. The first empirical article focuses on the overeducation incidence of a sample of Italian graduates from different fields of study and social origin. The second article assesses the different strengths of field of study and social origin in predicting overeducation risk across countries with different arrangements in their national education systems. Finally, the third article addresses overeducation persistence and the variation in graduates’ likelihood of exiting overeducation across fields of study and social origin.