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This paper utilizes the German Mikrozensus to model competing secondary school outcomes among both foreign and naturalized children of guest workers, ethnic Germans, EU and third country immigrants. In line with previous research, I find that second generation disadvantage in educational attainment is largely explained by parental background. However, my study also finds evidence of higher attainment ...
Colchester:
Institute for Social and Economic Research (ISER),
2010,
(ISER Working Paper 2010-21)
| Renee Reichl Luthra
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Exploiting the 2005 Mikrozensus, the first dataset to allow the full disaggregation of different immigrant origin groups in Germany, this paper examines the effect of context of reception, citizenship, and intermarriage on the labor force participation, employment, and occupational status of the children of immigrants in Germany. Most second generation men have much higher unemployment than native ...
Colchester:
University of Essex,
2010,
(ISER Working Paper 2010-30)
| Renee Reichl Luthra
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With the arrival of over one million asylum seekers in Germany in 2015, policy discussions opened whether refugees should be spread across the country or spatially concentrated in order to facilitate their integration in society. When an immigrant locates in a residential area with many natives or many foreigners he has access to different respective social networks which are important for the labor ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2018,
(SOEPpapers 1019)
| Sebastian Reil
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In:
The Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance: Issues and Practice
24 (1999), 1, 50-63
| Anette Reil-Held
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2006,
| Julia Reilich
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Looking at smoking-behavior it can be shown that there are differences concerning the time-preference-rate. Therefore this has an effect on the optimal schooling decision in the way that we appear a lower average human capital level for smokers. According to a higher time-preference-rate additionally we suppose a higher return to education for smokers who go further on education. With our empirical ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2011,
(SOEPpapers 420)
| Julia Reilich
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In:
Quality and Quantity
39 (2005), 4, 483-506
| Jost Reinecke, Peter Schmidt, Stefan Weick
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Anaheim:
1997,
| Jost Reinecke, Hermann Singer
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The European social-welfare model differs from the North American individualistic model in the patterns, more than the overall extent, of ethnic inclusion and exclusion. Focussing on foreigners in Germany and immigrants in Canada as illustrative cases, conventional earnings decomposition analysis is extended cross-nationally to highlight institutional effects, using the German Socio-Economic Panel ...
In:
Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
25 (1999), 3, 397-443
| Jeffrey G. Reitz, Joachim R. Frick, Tony Calabrese, Gert G. Wagner
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Mannheim:
Centre for European Economic Research,
2000,
(ZEW Discussion Paper No. 00-26)
| Frank Reize