The Stratification of Universities Revisited: Status, Followers, and the Shape of National Hierarchies

Roger Pizarro Milian
, David Zarifa

Abstract

It is generally accepted that Canadian universities are less stratified than their southern neighbours, a hypothesis popularized in the mid-2000s and verified by subsequent comparative empirical research. Through this piece, we revisit the Canadian “flatness” hypothesis, embracing a more sociological definition of status hierarchies and using social media followers as a focal proxy for status. Despite our theoretically based skepticism, adoption of an alternative status proxy, and use of more recent data, our analyses validate the flatness hypothesis. We theorize the implications of these findings, and our novel approach, for the study of organizational stratification in higher education.

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Published

2023-12-23


Keywords

organizational stratification, higher education, universities, Twitter



Section

Articles



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How to Cite

Pizarro Milian, R., & Zarifa, D. (2023). The Stratification of Universities Revisited: Status, Followers, and the Shape of National Hierarchies . Canadian Journal of Higher Education/La Revue Canadienne d’enseignement supérieur, 53(2), 32–48. https://doi.org/10.47678/cjhe.v53i2.189881