...this new theory is appealing. Recommended. All levels.
E. P. Hoffman, Western Michigan University, CHOICE
The Death of Human Capital? challenges the conventional wisdom of human capital theory when analyzing higher education, graduate employment, and youth transition from education to work. It is not only thought-provoking, but breaks new ground for offering comparative and international perspectives in understanding global competition, new technologies, and economic inequalities in the highly globalized world." -Ka Ho Mok, Chair Professor of Comparative Policy, Lingnan University, Hong Kong
Human capital theory and the policies spawned from it have promised much, delivered little, and trapped us all in an endless cycle of chasing the next credential. Brown, Lauder, and Chueng provide a clear and compelling argument for an alternative vision of labor markets that accounts for job creation, job destruction, and job skills, providing a roadmap for coming to terms with real inequalities in opportunity and life chances." -Kevin T. Leicht, Professor of Sociology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign