Durkheim, Emile

Division of labour in society - Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan, 2013 - liii, 370 p. ; 24 cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The importance of non-cognitive skills in determining long-term human capital and labor market outcomes is widely acknowledged, but relatively little is known about how educational investments by parents may respond to non-cognitive skills early in life. This paper evaluates the parental response to variation in non-cognitive skills among their children in rural Gansu province, China, employing a household fixed effects specification; non-cognitive skills are defined as the inverse of both externalizing challenges (behavioral problems and aggression) and internalizing challenges (anxiety and withdrawal). The results suggest that on average, parents invest no more in terms of educational expenditure in children who have better non-cognitive skills relative to their siblings. However, there is significant heterogeneity with respect to maternal education; less educated mothers appear to reinforce differences in non-cognitive skills between their children, while more educated mothers compensate for these differences. Most importantly, there is evidence that these compensatory investments lead to catch-up in non-cognitive skills over time for children of more educated mothers.

9781137031822


Civil code
Co-operative law
Articles of association
From the division of social work (Durkheim, Emile)
Ancestors/Forefathers
Common consciousnes
Criminal law
Happiness
Ethics
Idealism
Individual consciousness
Industrial society
Iroquois
Middle Ages
Public opinion
Race
Religiosity
Repressive justice/law
Rome
Segmentary societies
Spencer
Violence
War/Warfare
Hezedity

306.36 / DUR

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