Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education?
Using data from the 2016 Census, this study examined the level of education–job mismatch (over-qualification, in particular) in the Canadian labour market among Indigenous women workers aged 25 to 64 who received post-secondary education. Their rate of over-qualification was compared with that of In...
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2021-04-01
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Online Access: | https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/aps/index.php/aps/article/view/29383 |
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doaj-cb1cd9956e654b67b0962bb1720018272021-04-28T21:46:31ZengUniversity of AlbertaAboriginal Policy Studies1923-32992021-04-019210.5663/aps.v9i2.29383Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education?Jungwee Park0Health Analysis Division, Statistics CanadaUsing data from the 2016 Census, this study examined the level of education–job mismatch (over-qualification, in particular) in the Canadian labour market among Indigenous women workers aged 25 to 64 who received post-secondary education. Their rate of over-qualification was compared with that of Indigenous men as well as non-Indigenous workers. In doing so, this study aimed to shed some light on the effect of post-secondary education on labour market outcomes by investigating whether Indigenous men and women benefit equally from their post-secondary education. Compared to their non-Indigenous counterparts and Indigenous men, Indigenous women workers with university-level education (bachelor’s degree or higher) were less likely to be over-qualified. Conversely, Indigenous women workers with post-secondary education lower than university level were more likely than non-Indigenous women and Indigenous men to be over-qualified. This pattern persisted after sociodemographic factors were controlled for. The results suggest that, among those with a post-secondary education, higher levels of education were especially advantageous to Indigenous women.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/aps/index.php/aps/article/view/29383 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jungwee Park |
spellingShingle |
Jungwee Park Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education? Aboriginal Policy Studies |
author_facet |
Jungwee Park |
author_sort |
Jungwee Park |
title |
Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education? |
title_short |
Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education? |
title_full |
Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education? |
title_fullStr |
Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Over-qualification in the Workforce: Do Indigenous Women and Men Benefit Equally from High Levels of Education? |
title_sort |
over-qualification in the workforce: do indigenous women and men benefit equally from high levels of education? |
publisher |
University of Alberta |
series |
Aboriginal Policy Studies |
issn |
1923-3299 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
Using data from the 2016 Census, this study examined the level of education–job mismatch (over-qualification, in particular) in the Canadian labour market among Indigenous women workers aged 25 to 64 who received post-secondary education. Their rate of over-qualification was compared with that of Indigenous men as well as non-Indigenous workers. In doing so, this study aimed to shed some light on the effect of post-secondary education on labour market outcomes by investigating whether Indigenous men and women benefit equally from their post-secondary education. Compared to their non-Indigenous counterparts and Indigenous men, Indigenous women workers with university-level education (bachelor’s degree or higher) were less likely to be over-qualified. Conversely, Indigenous women workers with post-secondary education lower than university level were more likely than non-Indigenous women and Indigenous men to be over-qualified. This pattern persisted after sociodemographic factors were controlled for. The results suggest that, among those with a post-secondary education, higher levels of education were especially advantageous to Indigenous women. |
url |
https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/aps/index.php/aps/article/view/29383 |
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