Family and Educational Inequality in China
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Product details
- ISBN 9781041316183
- Weight: 810g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 19 Jun 2026
- Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Publication City/Country: GB
- Product Form: Hardback
This book offers an in-depth examination of how family background shapes inequalities in children’s academic performance and cognitive skill development in China. It further identifies key mediating mechanisms—including living arrangements, family investments, parenting practices, and private tutoring—that help explain how these disparities emerge and persist.
While repeated cross-sectional data are valuable for examining macro-level social changes over time, they are inherently limited in their ability to capture individual-level dynamics and identify underlying causal mechanisms. To overcome these limitations, sociologists of China have increasingly turned to the rich, high-quality longitudinal data provided by the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS), launched in 2010, to investigate social and economic inequality across multiple levels and domains. The essays in this volume draw exclusively on CFPS data and collectively examine how families shape children’s educational attainment, highlighting a range of intervening pathways. Together, these studies provide a coherent and empirically rigorous understanding of the mechanisms through which family background contributes to educational inequality in contemporary China.
This book will be an important resource for researchers and academics of Chinese sociology and demography. The articles were originally published in various issues of Chinese Sociological Review.
Xiaogang Wu is the Yufeng Global Professor of Social Science and Professor of Sociology at NYU Shanghai and New York University, and the Founding Director of the Center for Applied Social and Economic Research (CASER) at NYU Shanghai. His research and teaching interests include Chinese society, social inequality and stratification, survey and quantitative methods, and urban sociology. He has been serving as the Chief Editor of Chinese Sociological Review since 2011. He was a Co-Principal Investigator (Co-PI) of the Chinese General Social Survey (CGSS) and a member of international advisory board of the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS).
