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A number of studies in the human resources literature acknowledge the importance of workplace training for inducing organizational commitment on the part of workers. However, small sample sizes and the absence of relevant panel data have raised concerns about the general validity of results and highlighted the need for further research to explicitly include on-the-job training as an important facet ...
In:
International Journal of Human Resource Management
18 (2007), 6, 969-985
| Yannis Georgellis, Thomas Lange
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London:
University of London, Birkbeck College (Department of Economics),
1998,
(Discussion Papers in Economics No. 3/98)
| Yannis Georgellis, Howard J. Wall
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Several scholars have concluded that ethnic diversity has negative consequences for social trust. However, recent research has called into question whether ethnic diversity per se has detrimental effects, or whether lower levels of trust in diverse communities simply reflect a higher concentration of less trusting groups, such as poor people, minorities, or immigrants. Drawing upon a nationally representative ...
In:
PLOS ONE
13 (2018), 7,
| Johanna Gereke, Max Schaub, Delia Baldassarri
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Bern:
Universität Bern, Abteilung für Angewandte Mikroökonomie,
1993,
(Diskussionspapier Nr. 93-15)
| Michael Gerfin
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Bern:
Universität Bern, Abteilung für Angewandte Mikroökonomie,
1995,
(Discussion Paper No. 95-2)
| Michael Gerfin
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Names often indicate belonging to a certain ethnic group. When immigrant parents choose a first name for their child that is common in their host society, they show a high degree of acculturation. In contrast, selecting a name common only in the parents’ country of origin indicates ethnic maintenance. Using data from the German Socio-economic Panel for Turkish, Southwest European, and former Yugoslav ...
In:
American Journal of Sociology
114 (2009), 4, 1102-1128
| Jürgen Gerhards, Silke Hans
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Due to globalization, skills such as foreign language proficiency and intercultural competence, here referred to as transnational human capital, are becoming increasingly important. A study-abroad program during schooling is one of the most efficient ways to acquire transnational human capital. Until now, class-specific access to transnational capital has remained largely unexplored. With recourse ...
In:
Zeitschrift für Soziologie
42 (2013), 2, 99-117
| Jürgen Gerhards, Silke Hans
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Since the beginning of 2016, the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) study has been conducting a monthly survey of German attitudes, expectations, and fears concerning migration. The third wave of the survey,—the Barometer of Public Opinion on Refugees in Germany (Stimmungsbarometer zu Geflüchteten in Deutschland)—, conductedin March 2016, shows that more than half of all respondents still associate the influx ...
In:
DIW Economic Bulletin
6 (2016), 21, 243-249
| Jürgen Gerhards, Silke Hans, Jürgen Schupp
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At the outset, this article describes in detail how the European Union has replaced the nation-state concept of equality with a transnational idea of equality for all European citizens. It then investigates the extent to which German respondents support the idea of non-discrimination between German nationals and other Europeans. The existing literature argues that the process of opening up the borders ...
In:
European Sociological Review
29 (2011), 1, 19-31
| Jürgen Gerhards, Holger Lengfeld
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In:
Empirica
25 (1998), 245-261
| Knut Gerlach, Olaf Hübler