2014
DOI: 10.1093/esr/jcu071
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Who They Were There: Immigrants' Educational Selectivity and Their Children's Educational Attainment

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Cited by 180 publications
(240 citation statements)
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References 47 publications
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“…Following the studies of Feliciano (2005bFeliciano ( , 2006 and Ichou (2014), this part of the analysis seeks to explain differences within the population children of immigrants, rather than vis-à-vis the majority (cf. Harris, Jamison, and Trujillo 2008;Levels, Dronkers, and Kraaykamp 2008).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Following the studies of Feliciano (2005bFeliciano ( , 2006 and Ichou (2014), this part of the analysis seeks to explain differences within the population children of immigrants, rather than vis-à-vis the majority (cf. Harris, Jamison, and Trujillo 2008;Levels, Dronkers, and Kraaykamp 2008).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Information comes from UN Demographic Yearbooks, UNESCO Statistical Yearbooks, and national statistical publications with interpolation for missing years. It is arguably the most comprehensive source of such data available, and has been used in previous studies of educational selectivity (Ichou 2014;Feliciano and Lanuza 2017).…”
Section: Data Measures and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Fortunately, the most recent data on U.S. immigrant families (such as those used in this article) now enable researchers to include additional controls for the aptitudes, values, and resources hypothesized to drive the different transmission rates across ethnic groups. Beyond the United States, a promising new line of research posits using measures of "relative educational attainments," or the educational position of the immigrant in the distribution of the country of origin (Ichou 2014), as a more universal control for parental background when making adjusted comparisons of second-generation outcomes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An increasing body of research in economics and sociology is concerned with identifying the extent to which migrants represent a selected sample of those in the country of origin (e.g. Dustmann, Fadlon, and Weiss 2011;Ichou 2014), yet empirical studies tend to lack precise comparators for the counterfactual non-migrant. These limitations stem from a paucity of studies that incorporate comparison with non-migrants and return migrants in countries of origin and which trace processes of intergenerational transmission across migrants over multiple generations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%