Flying the Nest: How the Home Department Shapes Researchers' Career Paths
ZEW Discussion Paper Nr. 15-050 // 2015This paper studies the importance of the socialization environment – nest – for the career destinations of early career researchers. In a sample of research groups in the fields of science and engineering at universities in Germany, we identify research orientation, output, funding as well as openness to industry and commercialization as relevant components. Nests that attract more public funding and are led by professors with high research performance are more likely to produce researchers that take jobs in public research, while links to industry predict jobs in the private sector. In a more nuanced analysis that differs by type of industry employment we find that larger firms also recruit from groups with higher scientific performance, while SMEs recruit from nests with a higher patent productivity. A focus on experimental development instead is associated with academic start-ups, and an applied focus with employment in consulting. Recommendations for research training are discussed.
Hottenrott, Hanna und Cornelia Lawson (2015), Flying the Nest: How the Home Department Shapes Researchers' Career Paths, ZEW Discussion Paper Nr. 15-050, Mannheim, erschienen in: Studies in Higher Education.