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从正门进入:为什么组织(仍然)偏爱传承申请人?

Through the Front Door: Why Do Organizations (Still) Prefer Legacy Applicants?

American Sociological Review · 2022
被引 13
人大 A+FT50ABS 4*

中文导读

研究美国精英大学招生中传承偏好(legacy preference)的机制,发现传承生并非更优秀或更多元,但因其校友贡献和家庭财富而获青睐,揭示了组织选拔中家族关系的作用。

Abstract

When screening candidates, organizations often give preference to certain applicants on the basis of their familial ties. This “legacy preference,” particularly widespread in college admissions, has been criticized for contributing to inequality and class reproduction. Despite this, studies continue to report that legacies are persistently admitted at higher rates than non-legacies. In this article, we develop a theoretical framework of three distinct sense-making strategies at play when decision-makers screen applicants into their organizations—the meritocratic, material, and diversity logics. We then apply this framework to investigate how legacy preferences either support or undermine each organizational logic using comprehensive data on the population of applicants seeking admission into one elite U.S. college. We find strong support for the material logic at the cost of the other two organizational logics: legacies make better alumni after graduation and have wealthier parents who are materially-positioned to be more generous donors than non-legacy parents. Contrary to the meritocratic logic, we find that legacies are neither more qualified applicants nor better students academically. From a diversity standpoint, legacies are less racially diverse than non-legacies. We conclude with a discussion of our study’s implications for understanding the role of family relationships and nepotism in today’s organizational selection processes.

组织选拔精英教育不平等社会学公共政策