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  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Impact of Implementing a Consumption Charge on Carbon-Intensive Materials in Europe

    The production of basic materials accounts for around 25% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Existing measures to reduce emissions from industry are limited due to a combination of competitiveness concerns and a lack of technological options available to producers. In this paper, we assess the possibility of implementing a materials charge to reduce demand for basic industrial products and, hence, ...

    In: Climate Policy 20 (2020), Suppl. 1, S. S74-S89 | Hector Pollitt, Karsten Neuhoff, Xinru Lin
  • Weitere referierte Aufsätze

    Analyzing 21st Century Video Data on Situational Dynamics: Issues and Challenges in Video Data Analysis

    Since the turn of the millennium researchers have access to an ever-increasing pool of novel types of video recordings. People use camcorders, mobile phone cameras, and even drones to film and photograph social life, and many public spaces are under video surveillance. More and more sociologists, psychologists, education researchers, and criminologists rely on such visuals to observe and analyze social ...

    In: Social Sciences 8 (2019), 3, 100, 21 S. | Anne Nassauer, Nicolas M. Legewie
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Life Cycle Environmental Impacts of Electricity from Fossil Fuels in Chile over a Ten-Year Period

    This study uses life cycle assessment to evaluate the environmental impacts of electricity generated from fossil fuels in Chile over a ten–year period, from 2004 to 2014. The focus on fossil fuels is highly relevant for Chile because around 60% of electricity currently comes from natural gas, coal and oil. The impacts are first considered at the level of individual technologies, followed by the evaluation ...

    In: Journal of Cleaner Production 232 (2019), S. 1499-1512 | Carlos Gaete-Morales, Alejandro Gallego-Schmid, Laurence Stamford, Adisa Azapagic
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Panel Survey Recruitment With or Without Interviewers? Implications for Nonresponse, Panel Consent, and Total Recruitment Bias

    In: Journal of Survey Statistics and Methodology 8 (2020), 3, S. 540-565 | Joseph W. Sakshaug, Sebastian Hülle, Alexandra Schmucker, Stefan Liebig
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Joint Roles of Parenting and Nutritional Status for Child Development: Evidence from Rural Cambodia

    Substantial work has demonstrated that early nutrition and home environments, including the degree to which children receive cognitive stimulation and emotional support from parents, play a profound role in influencing early childhood development. Yet, less work has documented the joint influences of parenting and nutritional status on child development among children in the preschool years living ...

    In: Developmental Science 22 (2019), 5, e12874, 19 S. | Jan Berkes, Abbie Raikes, Adrien Bouguen, Deon Filmer
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Top Incomes in Germany, 1871-2014

    This study provides new evidence on top income shares in Germany from industrialization to the present. Income concentration was high in the nineteenth century, dropped sharply after WWI and during the hyperinflation years of the 1920s, then increased rapidly throughout the Nazi period beginning in the 1930s. Following the end of WWII, German top income shares returned to 1920s levels. The German pattern ...

    In: The Journal of Economic History 79 (2019), 3, S. 669-707 | Charlotte Bartels
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Declining Teen Employment: Minimum Wages, Returns to Schooling, and Immigration

    We explore the decline in teen employment in the United States since 2000, which was sharpest for 16–17 year-olds. We consider three main explanatory factors: a rising minimum wage that could reduce employment opportunities for teens and potentially increase the value of investing in schooling; rising returns to schooling; and increasing competition from immigrants that, like the minimum wage, could ...

    In: Labour Economics 59 (2019), S. 49-68 | David Neumark, Cortnie Shupe
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    How to Liberalise Rail Passenger Services? Lessons from European Experience

    This paper studies the experience of Europe's three most liberalised railways - Sweden, Germany and Britain - in opening-up rail passenger services to competition by means of competitive tendering, and seeks to draw lessons for countries that are just starting the process, such as France. It also comments on experience of competition in the market in these and other countries (this form of competition ...

    In: Transport Policy 79 (2019), S. 11-20 | Chris Nash, Andrew Smith, Yves Crozet, Heike Link, Jan-Eric Nilsson
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Bootstrapping Impulse Responses of Structural Vector Autoregressive Models Identified through GARCH

    Different bootstrap methods and estimation techniques for inference for structural vector autoregressive (SVAR) models identified by generalized autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (GARCH) are reviewed and compared in a Monte Carlo study. The bootstrap methods considered are a wild bootstrap, a moving blocks bootstrap and a GARCH residual based bootstrap. Estimation is done by Gaussian maximum ...

    In: Journal of Economic Dynamics & Control 101 (2019), S. 41-61 | Helmut Lütkepohl, Thore Schlaak
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Predictors of Refugee Adjustment: The Importance of Cognitive Skills and Personality

    In light of the recent worldwide migration of refugees, determinants of a more or less successful integration are heavily discussed, but reliable empirical investigations are scarce and have often focused on sociodemographic factors. In the present study, we explore the role of several individual characteristics for refugee adjustment in the areas of (a) institutional, (b) interpersonal and (c) intrapersonal ...

    In: Collabra: Psychology 5 (2019), 1, Art. 23, 14 S. | Elisabeth Hahn, David Richter, Jürgen Schupp, Mitja D. Back
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Medical Malpractice Appeals in a Civil Law System: Do Administrative and Civil Courts Award Noneconomic Damages Differently?

    How do courts award noneconomic damages? Does it matter if the state is the defendant? This article addresses these questions in the context of medical malpractice appeals to the Spanish Supreme Court. Moreover, this study provides the first empirical analysis of the quantification of noneconomic damages in medical malpractice cases in administrative courts, where the state is the defendant, and in ...

    In: Law & Society Review 53 (2019), 2, S. 386-419 | Sofia Amaral-Garcia
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    A Novel Framework for Development and Optimisation of Future Electricity Scenarios with High Penetration of Renewables and Storage

    Although electricity supply is still dominated by fossil fuels, it is expected that renewable sources will have a much larger contribution in the future due to the need to mitigate climate change. Therefore, this paper presents a new framework for developing Future Electricity Scenarios (FuturES) with high penetration of renewables. A multi-period linear programming model has been created for power-system ...

    In: Applied Energy 250 (2019), S. 1657-1672 | Carlos Gaete-Morales, Alejandro Gallego-Schmid, Laurence Stamford, Adisa Azapagic
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Rising Longevity Gap by Lifetime Earnings: Distributional Implications for the Pension System

    This study uses German social security records to provide novel evidence on cohort trends of the heterogeneity in life expectancy by lifetime earnings and, additionally, documents the distributional implications of this earnings-related heterogeneity. We find a strong association between lifetime earnings and life expectancy at age 65 and show that the longevity gap is increasing across cohorts. For ...

    In: The Journal of the Economics of Ageing 17 (2020), 100199, 24 S. | Peter Haan, Daniel Kemptner, Holger Lüthen
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Measuring Attitudes Toward Distributive Justice: The Basic Social Justice Orientations Scale

    Previous research on social inequalities relied primarily on objective indicators. According to recent studies, however, subjective indicators that reflect a person’s perceptions and evaluations of inequalities are also relevant. Such evaluations depend on an individual’s normative orientation, so respective attitudes toward distributive justice need to be accounted for appropriately. This article ...

    In: Social Indicators Research 136 (2018), 2, S. 663-692 | Sebastian Hülle, Stefan Liebig, Meike Janina May
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Life Expectancy and Parental Education

    This study analyses the relationship between life expectancy and parental education. Based on data from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study and survival analysis models, we show that maternal education is related to children's life expectancy – even after controlling for children's own level of education. This applies equally to daughters and sons as well as to children's further life expectancies ...

    In: Social Science & Medicine 232 (2019), S. 351-365 | Mathias Huebener
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    The Impact of Competition Policy Enforcement on the Functioning of EU Energy Markets

    We investigate the impact of competition policy enforcement on the functioning of European energy markets while accounting for sectoral regulation. For this purpose, we compile a novel dataset on the European Commission's (EC) and EU member states' competition policy decisions in energy markets and combine it with firm- and sector-level data. We find that EC merger policy has a positive and robust ...

    In: The Energy Journal 40 (2019), 5, S. 97-120 | Tomaso Duso, Jo Seldeslachts, Florian Szücs
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Timing of Communication

    Using an experiment, we demonstrate that a communication regime in which a worker communicates about his intended effort is less effective in: (i) soliciting truthful information; and (ii) motivating effort than one in which he communicates about his past effort. Our experiment uses a real-effort task, which additionally allows us to demonstrate the effects of communication on effort over time. We ...

    In: The Economic Journal 130 (2020), 630, S. 1623–1649 | Puja Bhattacharya, Kirby Nielsen, Arjun Sengupta
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    Gibt es repräsentative Umfragen?

    In: Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik, Medizinische Psychologie 69 (2019), 5, S. 203-204 | Jannes Jacobsen, David Richter
  • Weitere referierte Aufsätze

    The Effects of Second-Generation Rent Control on Land Values

    Second generation rent control seeks to prevent negative quantity effects by exempting newly built units. The artificially lowered rent in the controlled segment makes renting attractive for households that would otherwise not have rented in the market, replacing households with higher willingness to pay for housing. These households bid up prices in the free market segment, giving rise to an opposite-sign ...

    In: AEA Papers and Proceedings 109 (2019), S. 385-388 | Andreas Mense, Claus Michelsen, Konstantin A. Kholodilin
  • Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

    One Size Does Not Fit All: Alternative Values-Based ‘Recipes’ for Life Satisfaction

    In most previous research on the determinants of Life Satisfaction (LS), there has been an implicit assumption that ‘one size fits all’. That is, it has usually been assumed that the covariates of LS are the same for everyone, or at least everyone in the Western world. In this paper, using data from the long-running German Socio-Economic Panel (1984-), we estimate statistical models to assess the effects ...

    In: Social Indicators Research 145 (2019), 2, S. 581-613 | Bruce Headey, Gert G. Wagner
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