Masterarbeit, 2025
131 Seiten, Note: 1,3
This dissertation fundamentally aims to uncover the root causes of institutional inequality within the US higher education system. It specifically investigates how inequality is institutionally constructed, maintained, and exacerbated, particularly against the backdrop of the "American Dream's" collapse.
2.1 Inequalities among the US Universities
From a political-economic perspective, higher education institutions behave out of proactive rational choices. Based on differences in funding sources and service scopes, I categorize higher education institutions into three types: private universities, public universities, and community colleges, in this section.
Firstly, private universities, whose primary funding sources are tuition, private donations, and alumni funds, lead the elitist education. Working with Congress and the industry, they help make the US higher education system rules. The second category is public universities, relying on the state government’s funding and a few tuition fees to survive, and they have a more public mission than private universities. Because part of their funding comes from taxpayers, they are also subject to policy supervision. The third category is community colleges, which are mainly supported by local and state governments and are local public service institutions that provide vocational training and adult education to local community residents, focusing on practicality and accessibility.
The inequalities these three types of higher education institutions engendered represent the first part of the theoretical framework, and the first chapter, I identify different behavioral models. In the first chapter, I analyze the unique distribution of resources but appears in a deeper structural form. Inequality takes shape for private universities when their power and voice in social relations dominate the philosophy of higher education. For public universities, the injustice reflects itself in that they give up competing with top liners for the right and stop voicing the public value of higher education. Instead, they blindly obey the higher education order created by private and elite universities, weaken the legitimacy of public investment, and finally take the active initiative to enter the corporate management model. Finally, community colleges, despite preserving the remnants of
Chapter 1: What is Inequality? Definitions, Mechanisms, and Institutions: This chapter establishes the conceptual framework by defining inequality, distinguishing between distributional and structural forms, and exploring reproduction mechanisms based on political economy and Bourdieu's theory of capital.
Chapter 2: Structural-Institutional Inequalities within the US Higher Education System: This chapter analyzes how structural-institutional inequalities manifest across different types of US higher education institutions (private, public, community colleges) and across social classes.
Chapter 3: Analytical Models: This chapter constructs an analytical framework using the "3I model" (interests, ideas, institutions), lobbying models, and the rent-seeking model to understand how institutional bias and interest solidification are structured.
Chapter 4: Research Design: This chapter outlines the research methodology, including objectives, process tracing strategy, case study approach, data collection methods, and operationalization to investigate student loan policy.
Chapter 5: Findings: This chapter presents the empirical findings regarding inequality in the policy implementation stage, examining legislative history, strategic behaviors, lobbying, rent-seeking, and the impact on different social classes.
Chapter 6: Critical Views on the Political Economy of Inequality: This chapter offers a critical perspective on the US democratic capitalist system, discussing the crisis of democratic capitalism, principal contradictions, and political resistance within higher education.
Chapter 7: Conclusion: This chapter summarizes the dissertation's key arguments, discusses its contributions and limitations, and suggests avenues for future research.
US Higher Education, Structural Inequality, Political Economy, Student Loan, American Dream, Institutional Bias, Policy Implementation, Lobbying, Rent-seeking, Social Class, Path Dependency, Distributive Justice, Cultural Capital, Democratic Capitalism, Process Tracing.
This work fundamentally examines the root causes and mechanisms of institutional inequality within the US higher education system, focusing on how it is structured, maintained, and exacerbated by political economy.
The central thematic areas include institutional inequality, political economy, structural reproduction, the role of student loan policy, analytical models of interests, ideas, institutions, lobbying, and rent-seeking, and critical perspectives on democratic capitalism.
The primary objective is to reveal the root causes of institutional inequality in the US higher education system, asking: How is inequality institutionally constructed, maintained, and exacerbated in a seemingly fair and widely expanded higher education system?
The scientific method used is a multi-level analysis combining process tracing, case study, discourse analysis, and logistic regression to investigate the policy formation and implementation of the federal student loan program.
The main body covers the theoretical framework of inequality, structural inequalities within US higher education institutions, analytical models of political influence, research design, empirical findings on policy implementation, and critical views on the political economy of inequality.
Key words include US Higher Education, Structural Inequality, Political Economy, Student Loan, Institutional Bias, Policy Implementation, Lobbying, Rent-seeking, and Social Class.
The thesis categorizes US higher education institutions into three types based on funding sources and service scopes: elite private universities, public universities, and community colleges, each with distinct structural roles in perpetuating inequality.
The "3I model" refers to Interests, Ideas, and Institutions, which are used as an analytical model to understand how institutional bias and interest solidification are structured in policy formation and contribute to inequality.
The student loan policy is identified as a key institutional turning point that transforms public funding into private debt, acting as a mechanism through which inequality is reproduced and intensified, particularly affecting lower-income students.
Bourdieu's theory of social capital and reproduction is employed to explain how various forms of capital (economic, social, cultural, symbolic) contribute to the structural encirclement of public resources by government and capital, thereby perpetuating educational inequality.
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