Racial Differences in the Occupational and Geographic Mobility of NCAA Division I College Basketball Assistant and Associate Head Coaches

IF 2.8 2区 社会学 Q1 ETHNIC STUDIES
Scott V. Savage, Kathryn Freeman Anderson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Racial/ethnic minorities, especially people racialized as Black and Latino, face disadvantages at work. Our research reaffirms and adds insight into this disadvantage, showing that compared to people racialized as White, racial minorities experience limited internal mobility and as a result greater geographic instability. Using data from a longitudinal study of the careers of NCAA Division I assistant and associate head basketball coaches, we show first that these coaches are more likely to experience internal job mobility if they are White. We also consider what this means for race differences in geographic mobility, establishing that coaches who are White move shorter distances following a job change on average because they are more likely to experience internal occupational mobility. These findings highlight yet another way restricted work opportunity culminates to disadvantage racial minorities in this profession.

NCAA一级联赛大学篮球助理教练和副主教练职业和地域流动性的种族差异
少数种族,尤其是黑人和拉丁裔,在工作中面临不利。我们的研究重申了这一劣势,并进一步加深了对这一劣势的认识,表明与被种族化为白人的人相比,少数种族的内部流动性有限,因此更大的地理不稳定性。通过对NCAA一级联赛助理和副首席篮球教练职业生涯的纵向研究数据,我们首先表明,如果这些教练是白人,他们更有可能经历内部工作流动性。我们还考虑了这对地理流动性的种族差异意味着什么,确定白人教练在换工作后平均移动的距离较短,因为他们更有可能经历内部职业流动性。这些发现强调了另一种限制工作机会的方式,最终使少数族裔在这一职业中处于不利地位。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
6.50%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: Race and Social Problems (RASP) provides a multidisciplinary forum for the publication of articles and discussion of issues germane to race and its enduring relationship to socioeconomic, psychological, political, and cultural problems. The journal publishes original empirical studies, reviews of past research, theoretical studies, and invited essays that advance the understanding of the complexities of race and its relationship to social problems.  Submissions from the fields of social work, anthropology, communications, criminology, economics, history, law, political science, psychology, public health, and sociology are welcome.
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