Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

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  • Value Differences between Refugees and German Citizens: Insights from a Representative Survey

    The political debate over the inclusion of refugees frequently revolves around cultural differences, in particular differences pertaining to values, which are suspected to hamper social integration. Sociological accounts of values in principle warrant the assumption that different values promote conflict over sensitive social issues. However, only little is known about the actual values of refugees ...

    In: International Migration 59 (2021), 5, 59-81 | Lukas M. Fuchs, Yu Fan, Christian von Scheve
  • The role of socioeconomic, cultural, and structural factors in daycare attendance among refugee children

    Bisherige Studien haben gezeigt, dass ethnische Bildungsungleichheiten bereits vor der Einschulung entstehen. Es wurde gezeigt, dass insbesondere für Lernende mit Migrationshintergrund eine frühe Bildungsbeteiligung einen positiven Einfluss auf die späteren Bildungsergebnisse hat, wobei der Erwerb der Sprache des Aufnahmelandes einer der Hauptmechanismen für diesen Effekt ist. Mit der Zuwanderung von ...

    In: Journal for Educational Research Online 13 (2021), 1, 16-77 | Christoph Homuth, Elisabeth Liebau, Gisela Will
  • Broken School Biographies of Adolescent Refugees in Germany (Kapitel 6)

    The recent movement of refugees to Germany also included nearly 600,000 children and adolescents. The two-cohort panel study “ReGES – Refugees in the German Educational System”1 was launched to analyze the integration of these minors in the educational system. This chapter introduces our study, its design, and the sample. It then focuses on the adolescent cohort and provides a first description of ...

    In: Annette Korntheuer, Paul Pritchard, Débora B. Maehler, Lori Wilkinson , Refugees in Canada and Germany: From Research to Policies and Practice (Gesis-Schriftenreihe, 25)
    Köln: GESIS
    123-142
    | Christoph Homuth, Gisela Will, Jutta von Maurice
  • Establishing a Survey of Refugees in Germany: Challenges in Sampling, Field Work and Measurement

    Diese Dissertation betrachtet verschiedene Schritte einer sozialwissenschaftlichen Erhebung zur Integration Geflüchteter in Deutschland. Anhand von vier Zeitschriftenartikeln wird eine neuartige Strategie, um eine Zufallsstichprobe von Geflüchteten in Deutschland zu ziehen, besprochen, die Folgen fehlender muttersprachlicher Übersetzungen von Fragebögen analysiert, latente Konstrukte auf Vergleichbarkeit ...

    2020, | Jannes Jacobsen
  • Labour Market Participation of Refugees in Germany: Legal Context and Individual-level Factors (Kapitel 10)

    Labour market access is a crucial aspect of integration. Among other things, it provides migrants with economic resources to participate in societal life in the host country. This chapter explores the factors of labour market access for refugees in Germany. First, we provide a brief overview of how labour market access is determined by legal status. Second, we explore individual aspects of labour market ...

    In: Annette Korntheuer, Paul Pritchard, Débora B. Maehler, Lori Wilkinson , Refugees in Canada and Germany: From Research to Policies and Practice (Gesis-Schriftenreihe, 25)
    Köln: GESIS
    189-201
    | Jannes Jacobsen, Magdalena Krieger, Nicolas Legewie
  • The Dynamics of Return Migration, Human Capital Accumulation, and Wage Assimilation

    This article develops and estimates a dynamic model where individuals differ in ability and location preference to evaluate the mechanisms that affect the evolution of immigrants’ careers in conjunction with their re-migration plans. Our analysis highlights a novel form of selective return migration where those who plan to stay longer invest more into skill acquisition, with important implications ...

    In: Review of Economic Studies 89 (2022), 6, 2841-2871 | Jérôme Adda, Christian Dustmann, Joseph-Simon Görlach
  • Language, or Dialect, That Is the Question. How Attitudes Affect Language Statistics Using the Example of Low German

    This paper explores how attitudes affect the seemingly objective process of counting speakers of varieties using the example of Low German, Germany’s sole regional language. The initial focus is on the basic taxonomy of classifying a variety as a language or a dialect. Three representative surveys then provide data for the analysis: the Germany Survey 2008, the Northern Germany Survey 2016, and the ...

    In: Languages 6 (2021), 1, 40 | Astrid Adler
  • Personality maturation and personality relaxation: Differences of the Big Five personality traits in the years around the beginning and ending of working life

    Objective: At work, people are confronted with clear behavioral expectations. In line with the Social Investment Principle, the beginning and ending of working life might thus promote changes in personality traits that are relevant at work (e.g., Conscientiousness). Method: Based on the data from the Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), we examined nuanced differences of the Big Five personality traits ...

    In: Journal of Personality 89 (2021), 6, 1126-1142 | Eva Asselmann, Jule Specht
  • Gender differences in second language proficiency—Evidence from recent humanitarian migrants in Germany

    In this paper, we address gender differences in the host language proficiency of humanitarian migrants. Prior research has produced inconclusive results with regard to women’s host language proficiency relative to that of men: sometimes women’s proficiency exceeds that of men, sometimes women lag behind men, and sometimes there are no substantial differences. Using data on recent humanitarian migrants ...

    In: Journal of Refugee Studies 35 (2022), 1, 282-309 | Sarah Bernhard, Stefan Bernhard
  • Why a labour market boom does not necessarily bring down inequality: putting together Germany's inequality puzzle

    After an economically tough start to the new millennium, Germany experienced an unprecedented employment boom after 2005, only stopped by the COVID-19 pandemic. Persistently high levels of inequality despite a booming labour market and drastically falling unemployment rates constituted a puzzle, suggesting either that the German job miracle mainly benefitted individuals in the mid- or high-income range ...

    In: Fiscal Studies 43 (2022), 2, 121-149 | Martin Biewen, Miriam Sturm
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