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While recent literature in Germany has compared predictors of welfare use between EU and non-EU immigrants, refugees have yet to be added to the analysis. Using survey data of approximately 4,000 immigrants living in Germany, I examine the determinants of basic unemployment benefits receipt for intra-EU immigrants, refugees, and third country immigrants. In particular, I investigate how education affects ...
In:
Frontiers in Sociology
7 (2022), 839352
| Emily Frank
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Nürnberg:
Bundesamt für Migration und Flüchtlinge (BAMF),
2019,
(BAMF Brief Analysis 05|2019)
| Cristina de Paiva Lareiro
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Nürnberg:
Bundesamt für Migration und Flüchtlinge (BAMF),
2019,
(BAMF-Kurzanalyse 05|2019)
| Cristina de Paiva Lareiro
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An extensive body of research has documented the relationship between sexual orientation and income, but only a few studies have examined the effects of sexual orientation on workplace authority. This article investigates the probability of lesbian, gay and bisexual (LGB) people having (high-level) workplace authority and the effects of occupational gender segregation. It analyses four waves of data ...
In:
Work, Employment and Society
38 (2024), 3, 852-870
| Lisa de Vries, Stephanie Steinmetz
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There is a vast literature on the health benefits associated with volunteering for volunteers. Such health advantages are likely to vary across groups of volunteers with different characteristics. The current paper aims to examine the health advantages of volunteering for European volunteers and explore heterogeneity in the association between volunteering and health. We carry out a mega-analysis on ...
In:
European Journal of Ageing
19 (2022), 4, 1189-1200
| Arjen de Wit, Heng Qu, René Bekkers
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Single mothers are a particularly disadvantaged group in terms of their mental health and life satisfaction. While it is plausible that re-partnering could compensate for these disadvantages by providing social, emotional, and financial resources, the evidence is inconclusive. Using annual panel data from Germany (1984-2020) and the United Kingdom (1991-2020), this study examines the life satisfaction ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2023,
(MPIDR Working Paper WP-2023-001)
| Philipp Dierker, Mine Kühn, Mikko Myrskylä
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Junge Menschen mit allgemeiner Hochschulreife haben beim Erwerbseinstieg einen kurzzeitigen Startvorteil, wenn sie ihr Studium nicht an einer Universität, sondern an einer anderen Hochschule abschließen. Im weiteren Erwerbsverlauf müssen aber Personen mit einem anderen Hochschulabschluss im Vergleich zu denen mit Universitätsabschluss mit Einkommens- und Statusnachteilen rechnen. Nach Geschlecht betrachtet ...
Nürnberg:
Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung (IAB),
2023,
(IAB-Kurzbericht 2/2023)
| Hans Dietrich, Alexander Patzina
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Using microdata from 17 OECD countries, this paper documents a negative cross-country correlation between gender gaps in market hours and wages. We find that the cross-country differences in market hours are mostly accounted for by female market hours and the size of the sector that produces close substitutes to home production. We quantify the role played by taxes and family care subsidies on the ...
In:
Economica
90 (2023), 358, 373-408
| Robert Duval-Hernández, Lei Fang, L. Rachel Ngai
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Comparisons are crucial in shaping evaluations of one’s own position. Following this notion, we investigated the role of historical, financial, partner, occupational, and regional pay referents in predicting the just gross hourly earnings in a representative sample of German workers. Looking at this broad range of pay referents, we find that higher reference earnings were generally associated with ...
In:
European Sociological Review
40 (2024), 1, 129–142
| Philipp Simon Eisnecker, Jule Adriaans
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Immunization by vaccination is one of the most important tools for fighting the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet in many countries, immunization campaigns have been hampered by vaccine hesitancy within the population. Building on the idea that vaccination decisions are embedded in the broader societal context, we study the role of generalized trust—the belief that most people can generally be trusted—in vaccine ...
In:
PLOS ONE
17 (2022), 12, e0278854
| Philipp Simon Eisnecker, Martin Kroh, Simon Kühne