Publication | Open Access
Higher Education, Bigger Networks? Differences by Family Socioeconomic Background and Network Measures
68
Citations
48
References
2018
Year
Status AttainmentEducational AttainmentEducationSocial StratificationSocial SciencesSocial MobilityCollege AttendanceCollege PipelineWealth JusticeEconomic InequalityHigher Education AssociatesSocial Network AnalysisSocial InequalitySocial ClassNetwork MeasuresEducational StatisticsDisadvantaged BackgroundHigher EducationPersonal NetworkFamily EconomicsPopulation InequalitySecondary EducationSociologyDemographyBigger Networks
Income or health returns linked to obtaining a college degree often are greatest for individuals who come from socioeconomically disadvantaged families. Although this importantly suggests that college lessens many forms of inequality linked to parental socioeconomic status, empirical knowledge about adult network inequality remains limited. Drawing on the 1972–2014 General Social Survey, the author finds that higher education associates on average with a greater number of nonkin and community ties. However, college gains in nonkin networks and capital exist mostly among those coming from disadvantaged families, suggesting that college may substitute or compensate for otherwise limited networks. In contrast, differences in frequency of socializing by higher education are not conditioned by parental background. As a whole, the present findings suggest that college attendance may lessen life-course network inequality within the general population.
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