The romance of college attendance: Higher education stratification and mate selection

Educational achievement has increasingly replaced ascriptive social background as a factor structuring marital choice and generating homogamous unions. Analyzing data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we examine a particular aspect of this larger phenomenon by focusing on the extent to which...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inResearch in social stratification and mobility Vol. 26; no. 2; pp. 107 - 121
Main Authors Arum, Richard, Roksa, Josipa, Budig, Michelle J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ireland Ltd 01.06.2008
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Summary:Educational achievement has increasingly replaced ascriptive social background as a factor structuring marital choice and generating homogamous unions. Analyzing data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, we examine a particular aspect of this larger phenomenon by focusing on the extent to which institutional stratification across colleges contributed to social inequality through spousal selection for individuals who completed college by the mid-1970s. We demonstrate that one-third of college graduates who married/cohabitated with an individual with similar educational attainment married/cohabitated with someone who attended colleges with identical institutional characteristics. We also find that college stratification structured marital choices regarding the social and economic resources partners bring to marriage or cohabitating unions: women's more elite college attendance was associated with marrying/cohabitating with a man with higher subsequent annual income; while men's more elite college attendance was associated with marrying/cohabitating with a woman from more privileged social origins.
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ISSN:0276-5624
1878-5654
DOI:10.1016/j.rssm.2008.02.003