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Purpose: – Because of the increasing importance of immigration for Germany due to the ageing population and the lack of highly skilled in some industries, the purpose of this paper is to analyse the return‐migration of German immigrants. Design/methodology/approach: – The paper uses the German Socio‐economic Panel to conduct an event‐history analysis of return‐migration. Findings: – The analysis reveals ...
In:
International Journal of Social Economics
35 (2008), 11, 769-782
| Sebastian Gundel, Heiko Peters
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Scholars have recently stressed two important avenues for the study of cultural diversity and social capital: the role of political integration regimes as well as alternative indicators to generalised trust. This article addresses both. Focusing on Germany, it provides the first study of the relationship between cultural diversity and social capital in a country implementing an ‘assimilationist’ model ...
In:
Political Studies
62 (2014), 3, 596-617
| Birte Gundelach, Richard Traunmüller
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Wiesbaden:
Destatis,
2003,
(CHINTEX Working Paper #19)
| Roland Günther
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In:
Ulrich Rendtel, Manfred Ehling, et al. ,
Harmonisation of Panel Surveys and Data Quality (Chintex)
Wiesbaden: Statistisches Bundesamt
8-38
| Roland Günther
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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2002,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 331)
| Neeru Gupta, et al.
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In:
Judith Treas, Sonja Drobnic ,
Dividing the Domestic: Men, Women, and Household Work in Cross-National Perspective
Stanford: Stanford University Press
105-122
| Sanjiv Gupta, Marie Evertsson, Daniela Grunow, Magnus Nermo, Liana C. Sayer
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In:
Journal of Population Economics
5 (1992), 1, 61-85
| Siv Gustafsson
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This article examines the employment patterns of new mothers from one year before the birth of their first child until its fifth birthday in Sweden, Germany, Britain, the Netherlands and Japan. Data on the labour force status of mothers was drawn from household panel data from each country. That data showed significant differences in the employment patterns of new mothers. This article discusses the ...
In:
Transfer
10 (2004), 1, 34-47
| Siv Gustafsson, Eiko Kenjoh
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We use data from Great Britain, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden to examine whether part-time and intermittent work during early motherhood leads to regular full-time work later. We find that in Sweden, by the time the first child is four years old 80 percent of mothers are working full-time if 25 hours is counted as full-time work, but only 30 percent if a 35-hour threshold is used. This finding ...
In:
Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference of German Socio-Economic Panel Study Users. Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung
70 (2001), 1, 15-23
| Siv Gustafsson, Eiko Kenjoh, Cécile Wetzels
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In:
Elisabetta Ruspini, Angela Dale ,
The Gender Dimension of Social Change - The contributin of dynamic research to the study of women's life courses
Bristol: The Policy Press
55-79
| Siv Gustafsson, Eiko Kenjoh, Cécile Wetzels