Publikationen mit SOEP-Daten: SOEPlit

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14002 Ergebnisse, ab 6191
  • Remodelling Class to Make Sense of Service Employment: Evidence for Britain and Germany

    This paper presents a novel class schema that aims at responding to the analytical challenge of an increasingly tertiarized, skill-intensive and feminized employment structure. For this matter, the traditional vertical class criterion distinguishing between more or less advantageous employment relationships is complemented by a horizontal criterion. The horizontal criterion’s purpose is to separate ...

    Genf: University of Geneva, 2008,
    (CREST ENSAE Seminar Paper)
    | Daniel Oesch
  • Occupational Change in Europe: How Technology and Education Transform the Job Structure

    Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013, | Daniel Oesch
  • Welfare regimes and change in the employment structure: Britain, Denmark and Germany since 1990

    Welfare states are often reduced to their role as providers of social protection and redistribution. In 1990, Esping-Andersen argued that they also affect employment creation and the class structure. We analyse the stratification outcomes for three welfare regimes – Britain, Germany and Denmark – over the 1990s and 2000s. Based on individual-level surveys, we observe a disproportionate increase among ...

    In: Journal of European Social Policy 25 (2015), 1, 94-110 | Daniel Oesch
  • Does Unemployment Hurt Less if There Is More of It Around?: A Panel Analysis of Life Satisfaction in Germany and Switzerland

    This paper examines the existence of a habituation effect to unemployment: Do the unemployed suffer less from job loss if unemployment is more widespread, if their own unemployment lasts longer and if unemployment is a recurrent experience? The underlying idea is that unemployment hysteresis may operate through a sociological channel: if many people in the community lose their job and remain unemployed ...

    In: European Sociological Review 29 (2013), 5, 955-967 | Daniel Oesch, Oliver Lipps
  • Upgrading or Polarization? Occupational Change in Britain, Germany, Spain and Switzerland

    We analyze occupational change over the last two decades in Britain, Germany, Spain and Switzerland: which jobs have been expanding – high-paid jobs, low-paid jobs or both? Based on individual-level data, four hypotheses are examined: skillbiased technical change, routinization, skill supply evolution and wage-setting institutions. Our analysis reveals massive occupational upgrading which closely matches ...

    In: Socio-Economic Review 9 (2011), 3, 503-531 | Daniel Oesch, Jorge Rodríguez Menés
  • Verschuldung als soziale Lebenslage (Abschnitt C)

    In: Schufa Holding AG , Schuldenkompass 2006 - Empirische Indikatoren der privaten Ver- und Überschuldung in Deutschland
    Wiesbaden: Schufa Holding AG
    129-137
    | Detlef Oesterreich, Eva Schulze
  • Noten in qualifizierten Arbeitszeugnissen

    In: Computerwoche online vom 09. August 2010 (2010), | Renate Oettinger
  • The type to train? Impacts of personality characteristics on further training participation

    Personality traits drive behaviors and attitudes, and determine socio-economic life outcomes for individuals. This paper investigates the relationship of six personality traits, the Big Five and Locus of Control, to individual participation in employment-related further education and training (FET) in a longitudinal perspective. Initial research suggests that training is a crucial determinant of life ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2013,
    (SOEPpapers 531)
    | Judith Offerhaus
  • Die Entwicklung der Einkommen und Vermögen in den neuen Bundesländern seit 1990. Von der Transformations- zur Verteilungskrise?

    In: Jürgen Zerche , Vom sozialistischen Versorgungsstaat zum Sozialstaat Bundesrepublik
    Regensburg: Transfer-Verl.
    96-119
    | Volker Offermann
  • The Optimum Level of Well-Being: Can People Be Too Happy?

    Psychologists, self-help gurus, and parents all work to make their clients, friends, and children happier. Recent research indicates that happiness is functional and generally leads to success. However, most people are already above neutral in happiness, which raises the question of whether higher levels of happiness facilitate more effective functioning than do lower levels. Our analyses of large ...

    In: Ed Diener , The Science of Well-Being (Social Indicators Research Series, Vol. 37)
    Dordrecht, Heidelberg, London, New York: Springer
    175-200
    | Shigehiro Oishi, Ed Diener, Richard E. Lucas
14002 Ergebnisse, ab 6191
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