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Paradoxes of the Democratization of Higher Education

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Research in Social Problems and Public Policy presents important themes of: social/crime problems and their treatment; criminal justice; law and public policy; crime, deviance and social control; s...
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  • 17 November 2016
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Research in Social Problems and Public Policy (RSPPP) is a peer-reviewed series devoted to the sharpening and reshaping of scientific discourse involving the intersection of social problems and public policy. In particular, it is interested in the analysis of the potential failure of public institutions to fulfil their obligations to the broader society.
Multidisciplinary in nature, Research in Social Problems and Public Policy presents important themes of: social/crime problems and their treatment; criminal justice; law and public policy; crime, deviance and social control; courts and diversion programs; therapeutic jurisprudence, restorative justice and alternative dispute resolution; law and society; substance use/abuse and treatment; health and society; and institutional interaction. The articles have a clear connection to the series’ main focus, lying at the confluence of social problems and public policy. This volume focuses on the democratization of higher education.
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Price: $161.99
Pages: 240
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Series: Research in Social Problems and Public Policy
Publication Date: 17 November 2016
ISBN: 9781786352347
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

EDUCATION / Higher, Higher & further education, tertiary education

Youn presents readers with a collection of essays and articles investigating various paradoxes in the democratization of higher education. The six selections that make up the main body of the text are devoted to the intersection of student loans and social class, leveled aspirations among low-income university STEM students, predictors of low-SES student persistence from the first to second year of college, a cultural analysis of college pathways among rural and first-generation students, and other related subjects. The editor is a faculty member of Boston College in Massachusetts.
Ted I. K. Youn, Department of Sociology, Lynch School of Education, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA
Introduction - Ted I. K. Youn The Intersection Of Student Loans And Social Class: Exploring Borrowers' Journeys Into Debt And Repayment - Elissa Chin Lu Cooling Out And Leveled Aspirations Among Low-Income University Stem Students - Heather Haeger and Regina Deil-Amen Predictors Of Low-Ses Student Persistence From The First To Second Year Of College - Heather T. Rowan-Kenyon, Rebecca D. Blanchard, Brian D. Reed and Amy K. Swan Country roads take me …?: a cultural analysis of college pathways among rural, first-generation students - Sarah Elizabeth Beasley The Paradoxes Of Pathways From College Aspirations To Attendance - Karen D. Arnold and Katherine Lynk Wartman Mapping Institutional Legitimacy In Meeting Of Expanding Demand For Education - Elizabeth Storrs