Field Experiments and Job Posting Sources: The Consequences of Job Database Selection for Estimates of Racial Discrimination

Author:

Pedulla David S.1,Muñoz John2,Wullert Katherine E.3,Dias Felipe A.4

Affiliation:

1. Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

2. YouGov, San Francisco, CA, USA

3. Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA

4. Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA

Abstract

Field experiments have proliferated throughout the social sciences and have become a mainstay for identifying racial discrimination during the hiring process. To date, field experiments of labor market discrimination have generally drawn their sample of job postings from limited sources, often from a single major online job posting website. While providing a large pool of job postings across labor markets, this narrow sampling procedure leaves open questions about the generalizability of the findings from field experiments of racial discrimination in the extant literature. In this paper, we present evidence from a field experiment examining racial discrimination in the hiring process that draws its sample from two sources: (1) a national online job posting website that aligns with previous research, and (2) a job aggregator service that scrapes the web daily in an effort to obtain all online job postings in the United States. While differing in the types of information they collect, we find the job postings drawn from the two sources result in similar estimates of discrimination against Black applicants. In other words, we do not find evidence that racial discrimination varies by the source of the job posting. We conclude by discussing the implications of these findings for studies of racial discrimination, discrimination along other axes of social difference, as well as field-experimental methods more broadly.

Funder

W.K. Kellogg Foundation

IRiSS at Stanford University

Russell Sage Foundation

Women and Public Policy Program at Harvard University

Sociology Department at Stanford University

UPS Endowment Fund at Stanford University

Washington Center for Equitable Growth

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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