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Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2008,
(SOEPpapers 142)
| Frank M. Spinath
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Understanding the sources of individual differences beyond social and economic effects has become a research area of growing interest in psychology, sociology, and economics. A quantitative genetic research design provides the necessary tools for this type of analysis. For a state-of-the-art approach, multigroup data is required. Household panel studies, such as Understanding Society in the UK or the ...
In:
Rat für Sozial- und WirtschaftsDaten (RatSWD) ,
Building on Progress. Expanding the Research Infrastructure for the Social, Economic, and Behavioral Sciences
Opladen: Budrich Unipress
353-366
| Frank M. Spinath
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Mannheim:
Centre for European Economic Research,
2005,
(ZEW Discussion Paper No. 05-40)
| Alexandra Spitz
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In:
Twin Research and Human Genetics
12 (2009), 3, 301-31
| Mirjam A. Sprangers, Jeff A. Sloan, Ruut Veenhoven, Charles S. Cleeland, Michele Y. Halyard, et al.
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We exploit the natural experiment of German reunification in 1990 to investigate if the institutional regimes of the formerly socialist (rather gender-equal) East Germany and the capitalist (rather gender-traditional) West Germany shaped different gender identity prescriptions of family breadwinning. We use data for three periods between 1984 and 2016 from the representative German Socio-Economic Panel ...
In:
Socio-Economic Review
20 (2022), 1, 257-279
| Maximilian Sprengholz, Anna Wieber, Elke Holst
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Berlin:
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Lehrstuhl Bevölkerungswissenschaft,
1995,
(Demographie aktuell, Paper No. 6)
| Wolfgang Seifert
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In:
new community
22 (1996), 3, 417-436
| Wolfgang Seifert
-
In:
Proceedings of the 1996 Second International Conference of the German Socio-Economic Panel Study Users. Vierteljahrshefte zur Wirtschaftsforschung
66 (1997), 1, 159-168
| Wolfgang Seifert
-
In:
European Journal of Population
13 (1997), 1, 1-16
| Wolfgang Seifert
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This paper uses the German Socio-Economic Panel to show that fathers – and to a lesser degree childless men and women, are most satisfied with life when working full-time or longer. In contrast, whether mothers spend more or less hours in employment hardly affects their life satisfaction. The rational maximization of income as postulated by family economics cannot explain these results, as they are ...
In:
Zeitschrift für Soziologie
47 (2018), 1, 65-82
| Martin Schröder