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Holmes, Malcolm D.; Smith, Brad W.; Freng, Adrienne B.; Munoz, Ed A. – Crime & Delinquency, 2008
Numerous studies have examined political influences on communities' allocations of fiscal and personnel resources to policing. Rational choice theory maintains that these resources are distributed in accordance with the need for crime control, whereas conflict theory argues that they are allocated with the aim of controlling racial and ethnic…
Descriptors: Proximity, Crime, Police, Law Enforcement
d'Entremont, Chad – ProQuest LLC, 2012
A major focus of charter school research has been the potential impact of increased school choice on student sorting by race/ethnicity and socio-economic status. Researchers have argued that charter schools may increase segregation by allowing families to separate into more homogeneous school communities. Yet surprisingly, little attention has…
Descriptors: At Risk Students, Educational Opportunities, Charter Schools, School Choice
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England, Paula – American Sociologist, 1989
Provides a feminist critique of rational-choice theory and the interdisciplinary feminist theories of sociology. Applies the separative model of self to four assumptions of the neoclassical economics version of rational-choice theory. Uses research on marital power to illustrate how removing distorting assumptions can help illuminate sociological…
Descriptors: Economics, Feminism, Interdisciplinary Approach, Marriage
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Hsieh, Chuo-Chun – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2023
The rich body of literature that has sought to shed light on how global trends shape public sector institutions at the local level frequently claims that globalization is significantly transforming national institutions. Against that backdrop, the term "governance" is actually a multifaceted concept representing an ongoing process…
Descriptors: Governance, College Administration, Higher Education, Global Approach
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Beekhoven, S.; De Jong, U.; Van Hout, H. – Research in Higher Education, 2002
Compared elements of rational choice theory and integration theory on the basis of their power to explain variance in academic progress. Asserts that the concepts should be combined, and the distinction between social and academic integration abandoned. Empirical analysis showed that an extended model, comprising both integration and rational…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, College Students, Higher Education
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Boyd, William Lowe; And Others – Journal of Education Policy, 1994
Rational choice theory and its three branches (game theory, collective choice theory, and organizational economics) has altered the face of political science, sociology, and organizational theory. This chapter reviews rational choice theory, examines a small body of work that relies on the rational choice paradigm to study educational politics,…
Descriptors: Democracy, Economic Factors, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Nguyen, David J. – ProQuest LLC, 2016
Doctoral student socialization is the most popular theoretical lens for understanding doctoral education. Socialization perspectives have illuminated the complex processes doctoral students undergo within their doctoral programs. Very little attention has focused on forces external to doctoral education. This study highlighted the ways in which 35…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students, Socialization, Decision Making
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Butts, Carter T.; Rode, David C. – Social Forces, 2007
We define a "hot potato" to be a good that may be traded a finite number of times, but which becomes a bad if and when it can no longer be exchanged. We describe a game involving such goods, and show that non-acceptance is a unique subgame perfect Nash equilibrium for rational egoists. Contrastingly, experiments with human subjects show…
Descriptors: Play, Participant Characteristics, Value Judgment, Economic Factors
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Bellah, Robert N. – Academe, 2000
This essay argues for ethical inquiry as the essence of true scholarship. Individual sections address: pure reason versus ethics, the current "age of money" in the university, rational choice theory, and the fatal flaw in rational choice theory that all human actions cannot be explained by it. (DB)
Descriptors: Educational Trends, Ethics, Higher Education, Philosophy
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Storen, Liv Anne; Arnesen, Clara Ase – Studies in Higher Education, 2007
This article examines sex segregation in higher education in Norway. The extent to which parent's education and occupation and students' grades have an impact on the choice of male and female dominated subjects is analysed. The analysis uses a framework which integrates socialisation and rational choice perspectives. The data used are from a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Career Choice, Gender Differences
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Netz, Nicolai – Higher Education Policy, 2015
This study examines factors that deter students in Austria, Germany, Switzerland and the Netherlands from studying abroad. Using an adaptation of the Rubicon model of action phases, the path to gaining study abroad experience is conceptualised as a process involving two thresholds: the decision threshold and the realisation threshold. Theoretical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Study Abroad, Models, Regression (Statistics)
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Lörz, Markus; Netz, Nicolai; Quast, Heiko – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2016
Alongside the educational expansion and internationalisation of economies, it has become more important for students' labour market success to spend part of their studies abroad. However, only a fraction of German students studies abroad. In particular, students from underprivileged families refrain from doing so. While the social selectivity of…
Descriptors: Study Abroad, Foreign Countries, Socioeconomic Influences, Student Mobility
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Gibbs, Jack P. – Social Forces, 1990
Suggests that this book is a major contribution to sociology and that its greatest (and most controversial) merit is its insistence that sociological macrovariables must be demonstrably related through individual action having purposive quality. Discusses modes of theory construction, rational choice theory, and reductionism. (SV)
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Social Theories, Sociology
Mastroieni, Anita – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This study sought to ascertain the specific motivations behind doctoral alumni giving. Most U.S. colleges and universities depend on alumni giving to supplement revenues from tuition and governmental support; however, relatively little alumni giving is generated from PhD graduates. The result is untapped revenue for doctoral-granting institutions.…
Descriptors: Fund Raising, Undergraduate Study, Donors, Motivation
Martin, Stuart – 1993
This longitudinal study of eight London families used rational choice theory to explore the extent to which parents behaved rationally while seeking a secondary school for their children, according to rights given them by England's Education Reform Act (1988). Families were recruited at two London primary schools serving predominantly low…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Decision Making, Foreign Countries, Parent Attitudes
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