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The educational and employment trajectories of migrant children in France and Germany are extremely diverse. The few successful ones dominate the public eye. Yet successful biographies of young adults with a migration background are in no way a negligible exception. However, the picture is different in the two countries: while in France more migrants’ descendants manage to reach their (secondary?) ...
In:
DIW Economic Bulletin
1 (2011), 5, 3-11
| Ingrid Tucci, Ariane Jossin, Carsten Keller, Olaf Groh-Samberg
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In:
Weekly Report
1 (2005), 5, 69-76
| Ingrid Tucci, Gert G. Wagner
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We introduce multi-trait analysis of GWAS (MTAG), a method for joint analysis of summary statistics from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of different traits, possibly from overlapping samples. We apply MTAG to summary statistics for depressive symptoms (Neff = 354,862), neuroticism (N = 168,105), and subjective well-being (N = 388,538). As compared to the 32, 9, and 13 genome-wide significant ...
In:
Nature Genetics
50 (2018), 2, 229-237
| Patrick Turley, Raymond K. Walters, Omeed Maghzian, Aysu Okbay, James J. Lee, et al.
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Berlin:
Technische Universität Berlin, Fachbereich Informatik,
1995,
(Bericht Nr. 95-15)
| Gerhard Tutz
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Berlin:
Technische Universität Berlin, Fachbereich Informatik,
1995,
(Bericht Nr. 95-4)
| Gerhard Tutz, Göran Kauermann
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Berlin:
Technische Universität Berlin, Fachbereich Informatik,
1995,
(Bericht Nr. 95-9)
| Gerhard Tutz, Lisa Pritscher
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Given theoretical premises, the gender-wage gap adjusted for individual characteristics is likely to vary according to age. This study adapts John DiNardo, Nicole M. Fortin, and Thomas Lemieux's (1996) semi-parametric technique to disentangle year, cohort, and age effects in adjusted gender-wage gaps. The study relies on a long panel of data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) covering ...
In:
Feminist Economics
24 (2018), 4, 108-130
| Joanna Tyrowicz, Lucas van der Velde, Irene van Staveren
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In:
International Population Reports, P25, 92-3, An Aging World II
Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office
90-95
| U.S. Bureau of the Census
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In:
German Economic Review
7 (2006), 2, 211-231
| Silke Übelmesser
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This paper analyzed the effect of major positive and negative life events (marriage, divorce, birth of child, widowhood, and unemployment) on life satisfaction. For the first time, this study estimated the effects of life events not with a precision of 12 months but of 3 months. Specifically, two questions were addressed: (1) Does the precision of the temporal localization of the event (i.e., 12 or ...
In:
Social Indicators Research
111 (2013), 1, 265-286
| Ekatarina A. Uglanova, Ursula M. Staudinger