Incentives in education and marriage

Type Thesis or Dissertation - PhD thesis
Title Incentives in education and marriage
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2008
URL https://repositories.lib.utexas.edu/bitstream/handle/2152/3848/gevrekd59673.pdf?sequence=2
Abstract
Choices pertaining to education, marriage and migration generally have
profound impacts on individuals’ lives. This dissertation focuses on the role of
incentives in decisions involving education, interracial marriage and migration.
To this end, Chapter 2 initiates a new line of research that investigates the role
of self-employed parents on their children’s post-graduation plans and college
success. Chapter 2 reveals that self-employed parents affect their offspring’s
college success even after accounting for possible ability bias and controlling
for various individual characteristics. While Chapter 2 focuses on the role of
parental occupation on students’ incentives to succeed in college, Chapter 3
and Chapter 4 investigate intricate relationships among education, interracial
marriage, the anti-miscegenation laws, and migration in the U.S. Chapter 3
introduces a study that links previous literatures on the migration of blacks
in the U.S. during the Great Migration with anti-miscegenation laws and interracial
marriage. Chapter 3 concludes that anti-miscegenation laws in individuals’
states of birth affected the sorting of inter- and intraracially married
black males into destination states differentially. Chapter 4 contributes to the
previous literature on the determinants of black-white marriages by focusing
on the impact of geographical variation of the distributions of black and white
education and individual education on interracial marriage

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