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In:
Handelsblatt vom 24.07.2008
(2008), 4
| Barbara Gillmann
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In:
Futures
23 (1991), 8, 787-800
| Katrin Gillwald, Roland Habich
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Bonn:
Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA),
2007,
(IZA DP No. 2884)
| Jose Ignacio Gimenez, Jose Alberto Molina, Almudena Sevilla Sanz
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In:
Monthly Labor Review
120 (1998), 3, 16-20
| Robert J. Gitter, Markus Scheuer
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Understanding the formation of trust at the individual level is a key issue given the impact that it has been recognized to have on economic development. Theoretical work highlights the role of the transmission of values such as trust from parents to their children. Attempts to empirically measure the strength of this transmission relied so far on the cross-sectional regression of the trust of children ...
Berlin:
DIW/SOEP,
2016,
(SOEPpapers 856)
| Corrado Giulietti, Enrico Rettore, Sara Tonini
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This paper studies the effects of immigration on health. We merge information on individual characteristics from the German Socio-Economic Panel with detailed local labor market characteristics for the period 1984 to 2009. We exploit the longitudinal component of the data to analyze how immigration affects the health of both immigrants and natives over time. Immigrants are shown to be healthier than ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2014,
(SOEPpapers 653)
| Osea Giuntella, Fabrizio Mazzonna
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In:
Rüdiger Pohl ,
Herausforderung Ostdeutschland - Fünf Jahre Währungs-, Wirtschafts- und Sozialunion
Berlin: Analytica
139-156
| Doris Gladisch, Ruth Grunert, Jürgen Kolb
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In:
Journal of Housing Economics
9 (2000), 1-2, 1-23
| Edward L. Glaeser, Bruce Sacerdote
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Debate continues in many European countries about both equality of opportunity and the continuing wastage of talent, and the ways in which differing systems of secondary schooling contribute to these. Drawing on Turner’s concepts of sponsored and contest mobility and on Allmendinger’s classification along the dimensions of stratification and selection, we describe the amount of flexibility currently ...
In:
European Sociological Review
27 (2011), 5, 570-585
| Judith Glaesser, Barry Cooper
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Charles RAGIN's work, especially his development of Qualitative Comparative Analysis (QCA), offers social scientists a way of bringing together the strengths of the qualitative and quantitative traditions. QCA takes a case-based rather than a variable-based analytic approach to cross-case analysis. One problem that arises in attempting to use QCA to explore causation in larger datasets, especially ...
In:
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
13 (2012), 2,
| Judith Glaesser, Barry Cooper