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Some evidence that women are more mobile than men: gender differences in U.K. graduate migration behaviour

Some evidence that women are more mobile than men: gender differences in U.K. graduate migration behaviour
Some evidence that women are more mobile than men: gender differences in U.K. graduate migration behaviour
In this paper we employ dichotomous, multinomial and conditional logit models to analyze the employment-migration behavior of some 380,000 U.K. university graduates. By controlling for a range of variables related to human capital acquisition and local economic conditions, we are able to distinguish between different types of sequential migration behavior from domicile to higher education and on to employment. Our findings indicate that U.K. female graduates are generally more migratory than male graduates. We suggest that the explanation for this result lies in the fact that migration can be used as a partial compensation mechanism for gender bias in the labor market.
0022-4146
517-539
Faggian, Alessandra
e970c6b0-82d6-4ae9-8ef5-db7b718bcd65
McCann, Philip
f0dd8037-995e-4ff9-b339-13dee3d67be6
Sheppard, Stephen
9be41195-c9f3-4bcf-854e-4813ca87b871
Faggian, Alessandra
e970c6b0-82d6-4ae9-8ef5-db7b718bcd65
McCann, Philip
f0dd8037-995e-4ff9-b339-13dee3d67be6
Sheppard, Stephen
9be41195-c9f3-4bcf-854e-4813ca87b871

Faggian, Alessandra, McCann, Philip and Sheppard, Stephen (2007) Some evidence that women are more mobile than men: gender differences in U.K. graduate migration behaviour. Journal of Regional Science, 47 (3), 517-539. (doi:10.1111/j.1467-9787.2007.00518.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In this paper we employ dichotomous, multinomial and conditional logit models to analyze the employment-migration behavior of some 380,000 U.K. university graduates. By controlling for a range of variables related to human capital acquisition and local economic conditions, we are able to distinguish between different types of sequential migration behavior from domicile to higher education and on to employment. Our findings indicate that U.K. female graduates are generally more migratory than male graduates. We suggest that the explanation for this result lies in the fact that migration can be used as a partial compensation mechanism for gender bias in the labor market.

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More information

Published date: August 2007
Additional Information: The paper investigates the employment-migration behaviour of a large sample of UK university graduates (~380,000 observations). Contrary to the findings of previous studies, the results indicate that female graduates are generally more migratory, even after controlling for a wide range of economic and location variables. Key PhD research.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 47013
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/47013
ISSN: 0022-4146
PURE UUID: 686edcd8-ffbd-47f0-ade1-c30c1b2b4bb1

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Jul 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:29

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Contributors

Author: Alessandra Faggian
Author: Philip McCann
Author: Stephen Sheppard

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