Publikationen mit SOEP-Daten: SOEPlit

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14238 Ergebnisse, ab 161
  • Social inequalities at the transition to higher education: the role of personality for graduates from vocational and general schools

    Previous research has shown that social inequalities in the transition to higher education are a persistent phenomenon in Germany. Additionally, studies indicate that graduates from vocational schools are less likely to enter higher education, compared to their peers who graduated from general schools. However, research is scarce about how social background effects may differ for graduates from vocational ...

    In: Empirical Research in Vocational Education and Training 17 (2025), 1, 7 | David Nika
  • Echoes of the past: The enduring impact of communism on contemporary freedom of speech values

    Free speech is essential for informed decision-making, government efficacy, and fostering innovation in liberal societies. But what promotes or hinders freedom of speech values? Exploiting the natural experiment of German separation and later reunification, we show that living under communism has had lasting effects on free speech opinions, and the convergence process has been slow. East Germans are ...

    In: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 227 (2024), | Milena Nikolova, Olga Popova
  • Gendered pathways to wealth? The self-assessed relevance of different accumulation channels among women and men across the wealth distribution

    Wealth inequality results from stratified access to accumulation opportunities, relating to differences in income, financial behavior, and transfers. Yet, it remains unclear whether these wealth accumulation channels differ in their perceived relevance for women and men along the wealth distribution. A deeper understanding of such perceptions is crucial for explaining attitudes toward inequality, shaping ...

    OSF Preprints: 2025, | Theresa Nutz, Nicole Kapelle, Daria Tisch
  • Roma Eterna? Roman rule explains regional well-being divides in Germany

    In light of persistent regional inequalities in adaptive outcomes such as health, well-being, and related personality traits, psychological research is increasingly adopting a historical perspective to understand the deeper roots of these patterns. In this study, we examine the role of ancient cultures, specifically the impact of Roman civilization around two thousand years ago, on the macro-psychological ...

    In: Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology 8 (2025), 100214 | Martin Obschonka, Fabian Wahl, Michael Fritsch, Michael Wyrwich, P. Jason Rentfrow, Jeff Potter, Samuel D. Gosling
  • Multivariate assessment of interviewer errors in a cross-national economic survey and the role of fieldwork institutes

    Interviewers have long been identified as a source of error in face-to-face surveys. However, previous studies have typically focused on a single source of interviewer error and single-country cross-sectional surveys. We extend this literature by investigating interviewer errors from multiple dimensions in the Oesterreichische Nationalbank Euro Survey, a cross-national survey conducted annually in ...

    In: Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society (online first) (2025), | Lukas Olbrich, Elisabeth Beckmann, Joseph W Sakshaug
  • Refugees (un)welcome: Regional demographic changes and individual attitudes towards refugees

    Background: Many refugees arrived in Germany in 2015 and 2016. At the same time, anti-refugee attitudes among Germans increased. This indicates an association between immigration and attitudes. Now, ten years later, renewed public concern about immigration - while not many immigrate to Germany - highlights the need to identify factors that shape attitudes towards refugees. Aim: Thus, I tested whether ...

    Berlin: Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW), German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), 2025,
    (SOEPpapers on Multidisciplinary Panel Data Research No. 1231)
    | Alyna Paul
  • How socioeconomic status affects a child's education – Investigating objective and subjective factors involved in shaping educational success in Germany

    Differences in educational trajectories between social backgrounds can only be partially explained by differences in cognitive abilities and are therefore considered educational inequalities. In this study, multiple constructs involved in the prediction of educational success were investigated in a joint approach to specify their unique contributions and to identify mechanisms associated with how socioeconomic ...

    In: Intelligence 113 (2025), 101970 | Lena Paulus, Frank M. Spinath, Elisabeth Hahn
  • Interaction effects on health between perceived neighbourhood social cohesion and demographic changes: a longitudinal study

    Background Perceived neighbourhood social cohesion is associated with better health in particular as a conveyor of social norms. Small-area demographic changes affect social structures related to health and so, could modify neighbourhood norms, lead to loneliness, or increased stress. Thus, demographic changes and perceived neighbourhood social cohesion are likely to interact in their relation to health. ...

    In: Journal of Epidemiology and Population Health 73 (2025), 6, 203154 | Odile Sauzet, Maria Schäfer
  • Gratitude in fundraising: do ‘thank you in advance’ and handwritten thank you notes impact fundraising success?

    While almost all charities rely on a set of donor appreciation strategies, their effectiveness for the success of fundraising campaigns is underresearched. Through two preregistered field studies conducted in collaboration with a leading German opera house (N = 10,000), we explore the significance of expressing gratitude and examine two different approaches to doing so. Our first study investigates ...

    In: Experimental Economics (online first) (2025), 1–10 | Maja Adena, Steffen Huck, Levent Neyse
  • Erwerbsminderungsrente: Reduzieren Partnerschaften das Zugangsrisiko?

    Die Deutsche Rentenversicherung verzeichnet jährlich rund 165 000 Neuzugänge in die Erwerbsminderungsrente. Das Risiko einer Erwerbsminderung hängt von verschiedenen, nicht nur individuellen Faktoren ab. Vor dem Hintergrund der Bedeutung von Partnerschaften für die Gesundheit, der Herausforderungen bei der Beantragung einer Erwerbsminderungsrente und des wachsenden Anteils von Personen, die nicht in ...

    In: Zeitschrift für Sozialreform 71 (2025), 3-4, 233–265 | Alberto Lozano Alcántara, Laura Romeu Gordo, Julia Simonson, Claudia Vogel
14238 Ergebnisse, ab 161
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