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Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2006,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 455)
| Vincent A. Mahler
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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2004,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 392)
| Vincent A. Mahler, David K. Jesuit
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In:
Janet C. Gornick, Markus Jäntti ,
Income Inequality: Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries
Stanford: Stanford University Press
145-172
| Vincent A. Mahler, David K. Jesuit, Piotr R. Paradowski
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This study explores the relationship between electoral participation and income redistribution by way of social transfers, using data from the European Social Survey, the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems and the Luxembourg Income Study. It extends previous research by measuring the income skew of turnout rather than using average turnout as a proxy for its income bias. We find that a larger income ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2015,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 633)
| Vincent A. Mahler, David K. Jesuit, Piotr R. Paradowski
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Persistently high unemployment rates are a major threat to the social cohesion in many societies. To moderate the consequences of unemployment industrialized countries spend substantial shares of their GDP on labor market policies, while in recent years there has been a shift from passive measures, such as transfer payments, towards more activating elements which aim to promote the reintegration into ...
2017,
| Robert Mahlstedt
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The gender wage gap is remarkably persistent in Germany. Additionally it is among the European Member states one of the highest. The paper examines the empirical data which allow analysing the gender wage gap; it discusses the development of the gender pay gap over time, the trends in wage inequality and the incidence of low pay. As institutional factors are of certain importance, the paper describes ...
Berlin:
Fachhochschule für Wirtschaft Berlin, Harriet Taylor Mill-Institut für Ökonomie und Geschlechterforschung,
2007,
(Harriet Taylor Mill-Institut für Ökonomie und Geschlechterforschung Discussion Paper 01, 12/2007)
| Friederike Maier
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In this study, we examined to what extent family policies differently affect poverty among single-parent households and two-parent households. We distinguished between reconciliation policies (tested with parental leave and the proportion of unpaid leave) and financial support policies (tested with family allowances). We used data from the Luxembourg Income Study Database, covering 514,019 households ...
Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2014,
(LIS Working Paper Series No. 622)
| Laurie C. Maldonado, Rense Nieuwenhuis
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Does their degree of religiosity affect how successfully recent Muslim migrants integrate socially into the host society in terms of their social contacts with the majority population and their ethno-religious group? And/or do these co-ethnic and interethnic social contacts affect the religiosity of Muslim migrants over time? On the basis of a two-wave study among recent migrants in Germany, the Netherlands ...
In:
Ethnic and Racial Studies
41 (2018), 5, 860-881
| Mieke Maliepaard, Diana D. Schacht
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Theorists have long maintained that people react to major life events but then return to a set-point of subjective well-being. Although evidence now indicates substantial inter-individual variability in these reactions, prior research has been limited by its use of average trajectories. In this study, we used latent growth mixture modeling to identify specific patterns of individual variation in response ...
In:
Journal of Individual Differences
32 (2011), 3, 144-152
| Anthony D. Mancini, George A. Bonanno, Andrew E. Clark
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Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2007,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper Series No. 465)
| Hadas Mandel