Affirmative Action in Undergraduate Education

Author:

Arcidiacono Peter12,Lovenheim Michael23,Zhu Maria1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Economics, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708;

2. National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138

3. Department of Policy Analysis and Management, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853

Abstract

The use of race in college admissions is one of the most contentious issues in US higher education. We survey the literature on the impact of racial preferences in college admissions on both minority and majority students. With regard to minority students, particular attention is paid to the scope of preferences as well as how preferences affect graduation, choice of major, and labor market earnings. We also examine how schools respond to bans on racial preferences and the effects these responses have on racial diversity at elite schools. With regard to majority students, we examine the evidence on the returns to attending a more racially diverse school, as well as how racial preferences affect friendship formation. Finally, we supplement studies of affirmative action in the United States with evidence from India, which provides a much more straightforward environment in which to study affirmative action owing to the use of quotas and admissions rules based solely on exam scores.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

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1. Inferring Trade-Offs in University Admissions: Evidence from Cambridge;Journal of Political Economy;2024-08-28

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3. When all you have is a hammer: how social justice distorts what we know about racial disparities;Theory and Society;2024-07-15

4. Closing the gap: Effect of a gender quota on women’s access to education in Afghanistan;Economics of Education Review;2024-04

5. Affirmative Action and Precollege Human Capital;American Economic Journal: Applied Economics;2024-01-01

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