How, and For Whom, Does Higher Education Increase Voting?

被引:9
|
作者
Ahearn, Caitlin E. [1 ]
Brand, Jennie E. [1 ]
Zhou, Xiang [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
关键词
College; Voting; Causal mediation; Heterogeneity; SENSITIVITY-ANALYSIS; CIVIC RETURNS; POLITICAL-PARTICIPATION; COLLEGE-EDUCATION; ECONOMIC RETURNS; BIAS FORMULAS; TURNOUT; MARRIAGE; DIVORCE; BENEFITS;
D O I
10.1007/s11162-022-09717-4
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
The college-educated are more likely to vote than are those with less education. Prior research suggests that the effect of college attendance on voting operates directly, by increasing an individual's interest and engagement in politics through social networks or human capital accumulation. College may also increase voting indirectly by leading to degree attainment and increasing socioeconomic status, thus facilitating political participation. However, few studies have empirically tested these direct and indirect pathways or examined how these effects vary across individuals. To bridge this gap, we employ a nonparametric causal mediation analysis to examine the total, direct, and indirect effects of college attendance on voting and how these effects differ across individuals with different propensities of attending college. Using data from the 1979 and 1997 cohorts of National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth, we find large direct effects of college on self-reported voting and comparably smaller indirect effects that operate through degree completion and socioeconomic attainment. We find the largest impact of college on voting for individuals unlikely to attend, a pattern due primarily to heterogeneity in the direct effect of college. Our findings suggest that civic returns to college are not contingent upon degree completion or socioeconomic returns. An exclusive focus on the economic returns to college can mask the broader societal benefits of expanding higher education to disadvantaged youth.
引用
收藏
页码:574 / 597
页数:24
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] How long does it take to earn a higher education degree in Spain?
    Lassibille, Gerard
    Gomez, Ma Lucia Navarro
    INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY IN EDUCATION, 2010, 2 (02): : 3519 - 3523
  • [22] How does globalisation interact with higher education? The continuing lack of consensus
    Dodds, Anneliese
    COMPARATIVE EDUCATION, 2008, 44 (04) : 505 - 517
  • [23] How Long Does it Take to Earn a Higher Education Degree in Spain?
    Lassibille, Gerard
    Navarro Gomez, Ma Lucia
    RESEARCH IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2011, 52 (01) : 63 - 80
  • [24] How Long Does it Take to Earn a Higher Education Degree in Spain?
    Gérard Lassibille
    Ma Lucía Navarro Gómez
    Research in Higher Education, 2011, 52 : 63 - 80
  • [25] How does curriculum making contribute to teaching culture in higher education?
    Laivuori, Martti
    Toom, Auli
    Tikkanen, Lotta
    Pyhaeltoe, Kirsi
    HIGHER EDUCATION, 2025,
  • [26] Does Compulsory Voting Increase Support for Leftist Policy?
    Bechtel, Michael M.
    Hangartner, Dominik
    Schmid, Lukas
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCE, 2016, 60 (03) : 752 - 767
  • [27] PLAGIARISM - WHAT IS IT, WHOM DOES IT OFFEND, AND HOW DOES ONE DEAL WITH IT
    ARMSTRONG, JD
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF ROENTGENOLOGY, 1993, 161 (03) : 479 - 484
  • [28] AUTOGENOUS TRAINING WHOM HELPS IT AND HOW DOES IT WORK
    ECKERT, H
    KATZBERG, H
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR KLINISCHE MEDIZIN-ZKM, 1989, 44 (25): : 2205 - 2207
  • [29] Does Flow Experience Lead to Risk? How and for Whom
    Schueler, Julia
    Nakamura, Jeanne
    APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY-HEALTH AND WELL BEING, 2013, 5 (03) : 311 - 331
  • [30] Does the Expansion of Higher Education Increase the Equality of Educational Opportunities? Evidence from Italy
    Bratti, Massimiliano
    Checchi, Daniele
    de Blasio, Guido
    LABOUR-ENGLAND, 2008, 22 : 53 - 88