TY - JOUR AB - Using a large sample with detailed information on 32,296 high-ability business, law, and engineering students, we explore gender- and migration-related differences in behaviour to better understand the persistent under-representation of women and migrants in the executive suites of German companies. Since in this homogenous group of ‘highachievers‘, students are quite similar in their intellectual abilities, observable differences in behaviour can be mainly attributed to differences in gender- and migration-related preference patterns. We find that irrespective of migration background, men are more likely to pursue activities that increase their human capital, such as completing a doctorate, while women tend to engage in lower-level temporary jobs and complete their studies faster. In contrast, in this selective sample of high-ability students, migration background has a marginal effect on students’ behaviour only. Perhaps most surprising, we find that the behaviour of women with a migration background – who potentially face ‘double discrimination‘ – is not different from that of their male peers. AU - Beck-Werz, Lisa AU - Frick, Bernd AU - Fritz, Thomas AU - Lensing, Fabian DO - 10.17619/UNIPB/1-2370 PB - Universitätsbibliothek DP - Universität Paderborn LA - ger PY - 2025 SP - 1 Online-Ressource (37 Seiten) Diagramme TI - Understanding the impact of gender and migration on high-ability students’ behavior: Exploring behavioral differences in business, law, and engineering students throughout their academic careers UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:466:2-55877 Y2 - 2026-01-12T08:50:44 ER -