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  • The effect of broadband Internet on the gender gap in mental health: Evidence from Germany

    Mental health disorders are among the leading causes of disease burden worldwide. Recently, attention has been drawn to the Internet and social media as determinants of the increase in mental health conditions in recent years. In this paper, I analyze the causal effect of broadband Internet access on the mental health of adults. I leverage confidential information on the coordinates of respondents ...

    In: Health Economics 31 (2022), S2, 6-21 | Marta Golin
  • Worries about different life domains and the likelihood of having children

    Previous studies have shown that worries about economic situation and job security are associated with childbearing, but evidence is scarce whether worries about other life domains are also related to having children. Drawing on the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (SOEP), we examined whether worries about different life domains were associated with the likelihood of having children in the total and ...

    2023,
    (SocArXiv Papers)
    | Kateryna Golovina, Markus Jokela
  • Resilient or Vulnerable? Effects of the COVID-19 Crisis on the Mental Health of Refugees in Germany

    Even though the COVID-19 pandemic had consequences for the whole society, like during most crises, some population groups tended to be disproportionally affected. We rely on the most recent data from the IAB-BAMF-SOEP Survey of Refugees to explore the resilience or vulnerability of refugees in the face of the pandemic. As the 2020 wave of the survey was in the field when the second nationwide lockdown ...

    In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19 (2022), 12, 7409 | Laura Goßner, Yuliya Kosyakova, Marie-Christine Laible
  • The Value of Foreign Language Skills in the German Labor Market

    This article explores the relationship between foreign language skills and individuals’ labor income in Germany, focusing on the English language. Using the 2012 and 2016 sample of the German Socio-Economic Panel’s Innovation Sample (GSOEP-IS), we find that native speakers of German with English language skills earn a wage premium of 13 percent, on average. Incremental improvements in the level of ...

    In: Labour Economics 76 (2022), June 2022, 102150 | Sabrina Hahm, Michele Gazzola
  • The Long-Term Implications of Destruction During the Second World War on Private Wealth in Germany

    By the end of the Second World War, an estimated 20 percent of the West German housing stock had been destroyed. Building on a theoretical lifecycle model of wealth accumulation, this paper examines the extent to which regional differences in destruction can explain differences in wealth today” – at the beginning of the 21st century. As our empirical basis, we link a unique historical dataset on the ...

    In: Journal of Economic Growth 30 (2025), 161-235 | Christoph Halbmeier, Carsten Schröder
  • Social integration of Syrian refugees and their intention to stay in Germany

    In this study, we investigate the determinants of social integration of Syrian refugees and the impact of social integration on refugees’ decision to stay in Germany, using the 2016 IAB-BAMF-SOEP Refugee Survey. Our econometric strategy is based on the estimation of a simultaneous equation model for social integration, economic integration, and the decision to stay, handling endogeneity issues through ...

    In: Journal of Population Economics 36 (2023), 581-607 | Cyrine Hannafi, Mohamed Ali Marouani
  • Assessing Liberal Democratic Values of Refugees in Germany and Their Origin Countries—Evidence for Cultural Self-Selection?

    Expanding on a new body of literature on cultural self-selection, the present study investigates how refugees who arrived in Germany since 2013 relate to the general population of their countries of origin in terms of liberal democratic values. The cultural self-selection literature suggests that more liberal individuals may be more likely to flee to Germany. To trace cultural self-selection amongst ...

    In: Journal of Refugee Studies 36 (2022), 1, 128-155 | Lukas M. Fuchs
  • Refugee Belonging: How Values and Value Consensus Between Refugees and German Citizens Are Associated with Feeling Welcome and Spending Time Together

    This article expands on the discussion of social and cultural factors for refugees’ feelings of belonging in the receiving society and assesses democratic, civic, and moral values as predictors of belonging. On the one hand, existing research considers shared values between refugees and the receiving society as hallmarks of integration. From this perspective, shared values (or value consensus) are ...

    In: International Migration Review 57 (2023), 3, 948-978 | Lukas M. Fuchs, Christian von Scheve
  • Migration as a Health Inequality Dimension? Natio-Ethno-Cultural Affiliation, Health, and Social Networks

    Concepts like race, migration background, or ethnic group are more and more being investigated in health research. It should be noted that those concepts themselves are very heterogeneous. They are, for example, endowed with different rights (e.g., cosmopolitan migrants from the global north, refugees from the global south) (Ambrosini & van der Leun, 2015) or have to deal with racism or discrimination ...

    In: Andreas Klärner, Markus Gamper, Sylvia Keim-Klärner, Irene Moor, Holger von der Lippe, Nico Vonneilich , Social Networks and Health Inequalities: A New Perspective for Research
    Cham: Springer
    291-324
    | Markus Gamper, Annett Kupfer
  • Immigrants’ Life Satisfaction in Intermarriages with Natives: A Family Life Course Perspective

    What role do intermarriages (i.e., interethnic marriages) play in immigrants’ life satisfaction? Only a few studies have addressed this question. While intermarriages are associated with upward mobility for immigrants, they are more likely to get divorced than intramarriages (i.e., marriages among co-ethnics), which suggests either a positive or negative association between intermarriage and immigrants’ ...

    In: International Migration Review 57 (2023), 3, 1069-1098 | Annegret Gawron, Sarah Carol
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