-
2014,
| Christiane Nieß
-
Given the negative effects of unemployment on society and individuals alike, research needs to identify factors associated with reemployment. Under the guiding framework of the dynamic developmental model (DDM) of personality and work, the present study therefore investigates the role of locus of control as both a contributor to and an outcome of reemployment. Building on a sample of 538 participants ...
2013,
(Paper presented at the 27th Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management Conference, Dec 4-6, 2013)
| Christiane Nieß, Torsten Biemann
-
This study aims to untangle the role of risk propensity as a predictor of self-employment entry and self-employment survival. More specifically, it examines whether the potentially positive effect of risk propensity on the decision to become self-employed turns curvilinear when it comes to the survival of the business. Building on a longitudinal sample of 4,973 individuals from the German Socio-Economic ...
In:
Journal of Applied Psychology
99 (2014), 5, 1000-1009
| Christiane Nieß, Torsten Biemann
-
This paper examines to what extent family policies have affected earnings inequality within and between coupled households. Previous studies had found cross-country variation in the degree to which women’s earnings attenuate earnings inequality between households. In this paper we explain this variation with reconciliation policies and financial support policies. We used person-level data from the ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2013,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 599)
| Rense Nieuwenhuis, Ariana Need, Henk Van der Kolk
-
In this paper we show that women’s earnings attenuate inequality between coupled households, even though the earnings of spouses are positively correlated. We use data from the Luxembourg Income Study (LIS, 2013) on 572,222 coupled households, covering the period from 1981 to 2005 in 18 OECD countries. Three trends are described. Firstly, over time women’s earnings increasingly contributed to total ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2013,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 598)
| Rense Nieuwenhuis, Ariana Need, Henk Van der Kolk
-
This study is the first to provide a causal estimate of the subjective well-being effects of spousal unemployment at the couple level. Using German panel data on married and cohabiting partners for 1991-2013 and information on exogenous job termination induced by workplace closure, we show that spousal unemployment reduces the life satisfaction of indirectly-affected spouses. The impact is equally ...
In:
Journal of Population Economics
32 (2019), 3, 799-844
| Milena Nikolova, Sinem H. Ayhan
-
In:
dw-world.de, October 11, 2010
(2010),
| Cinnamon Nippard
-
1987,
| Kamyar Niroumand
-
Previous research on the labour market outcomes of spatially mobile couples has shown that mobility has serious detrimental effects on the employment situation of women. This has been largely attributed to their prevalence as secondary earners playing a minor role in job-related mobility decisions of the household. Yet the impact of regional opportunity structures in determining labour market outcomes ...
In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch - SOEP after 25 Years. Proceedings of the 8th International Socio-Economic Panel User Conference
129 (2009), 2, 203-215
| Natascha Nisic
-
Analysen zu Arbeitsmarkteffekten regionaler Mobilität kamen bislang zu dem Ergebnis, dass Frauen in Partnerschaften erhebliche ökonomische Nachteile durch einen Wohnortwechsel haben, während Männer und auch ledige Frauen von Umzügen generell beruflich profitieren können. Die Erklärung dieser Befunde erfolgt meist auf Basis haushaltsökonomischer Argumente, die für die Beschreibung partnerschaftlicher ...
In:
Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie (KZfSS)
62 (2010), 3, 515-549
| Natascha Nisic