Fewer, better pathways for all? Intersectional impacts of rural school consolidation in China's minority regions
Emily Hannum, Fan Wang

TL;DR
This study examines how rural school consolidations in China's minority regions impact educational outcomes, revealing significant negative effects especially for minority girls and boys in impoverished, ethnically segregated communities.
Contribution
It provides novel insights into intersectional impacts of school consolidation policies on minority and gender groups in rural China.
Findings
Minority youth face greater negative impacts from school closures.
Impacts are more severe in poorer and highly segregated villages.
Gender differences influence the extent of educational penalties.
Abstract
Primary school consolidation--the closure of small community schools or their mergers into larger, better-resourced schools--is emerging as a significant policy response to changing demographics in middle income countries with large rural populations. In China, large-scale consolidation took place in the early 21st century. Because officially-recognized minority populations disproportionately reside in rural and remote areas, minority students were among those at elevated risk of experiencing school consolidation. We analyze heterogeneous effects of consolidation on educational attainment and reported national language ability in China by exploiting variations in closure timing across villages and cohorts captured in a 2011 survey of provinces and autonomous regions with substantial minority populations. We consider heterogeneous treatment effects across groups defined at the…
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