The mobility of students and graduates is viewed as a mechanism that can strengthen the cohesion of civil society and increase the capacity of national economies and science systems. From the individual point of view, mobility can be a strategy to improve individuals’ life chances.
Against this background, barriers to national and regional job markets have been loosened for the highly skilled workforce in recent decades, and widespread support for cross-border scientific collaboration has been provided. The establishment of programmes such as ERASMUS and the harmonisation of study structures during the Bologna Process have also created new opportunities for students to become mobile.
But who is using these opportunities? Which systemic, institutional, and individual factors influence whether highly skilled individuals move to other places to live, study, or work, either temporarily or permanently? And what short-, medium-, and long-term effects does mobility have on their life paths?
Due to the nature of existing data sources, research on education, labour markets, and migration has, for a long time, primarily examined these issues over wide swathes of the population and only rarely concentrated on highly skilled individuals. More recent data sources, however, have created new potential to analyse the causes and effects of high-skilled mobility. The purpose of the junior research group is to exploit this potential.
To supplement existing research on the mobility of the highly skilled, which is currently strongly characterised by macro analyses and often focuses on the immigration of highly skilled individuals (inbound mobility), the junior research group conducts micro-founded analyses of temporary or permanent emigration of highly skilled people (outbound mobility). Under the umbrella of the life course perspective, a range of sociological, psychological, and economic theories are applied to examine the wide range of causes of mobility, and its consequences for the life courses of individuals.
The dissertation project within the junior research group focuses on gender-specific causes and consequences of spatial mobility, and discusses whether the observed patterns differ among high- and low-skilled individuals.
Besides empirical analyses based on DZHW surveys and external data sources, the junior research group aims to produce synthesising studies that sum up the state of research in the field of high-skilled mobility and to contribute to the systematic development of this field.