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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
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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
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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
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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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Objectives: While encountering daily hassles is a normative experience, it poses a threat to individuals' daily affective well-being. However, physical activity engagement may help to reduce the current stress-related impact on affective well-being (i.e. stress buffering), which we investigate in this study. Furthermore, we examined the possible moderating role of people's global stress context ...
In:
British Journal of Health Psychology
28 (2023), 3, 876-892
| Leo Gerstberger, Elisabeth S. Blanke, Jan Keller, Annette Brose
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Diese Dissertation mit dem Titel „The role of resources in the employee well-being process: Person-oriented approaches and within-person effects“ basiert auf drei eingereichten und/oder veröffentlichten peer-reviewten Zeitschriftenartikeln. Die Artikel dieser Dissertation durchleuchen verschiedene Rollen, welche Ressourcen im Mitarbeiterwohlbefindensprozess spielen können. Mehrere Theorien und Ansätze ...
2022,
| Christopher Giebe
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Using data on couples from the German Socio-Economic Panel (1995–2018), this study investigates how couples’ early career trajectories affect housing outcomes in early adulthood and how this effect is mediated by couples’ joint cumulative income. We apply a life course perspective by identifying dynamic treatments consisting of couples’ consecutive employment statuses and examining their longer-term ...
In:
Advances in Life Course Research
51 (2022), 100445
| Sophia Fauser, Sonja Scheuring
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We study the endowment effect and expectation-based reference points in the field leveraging the setup of the Socio-Economic Panel. Households receive a small item for taking part in the panel, and we randomly assign respondents either a towel or a notebook, which they can exchange at the end of the interview. We observe a trading rate of 32 percent, consistent with an endowment effect, but no relationship ...
Berlin:
Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB),
2022,
(WZB Discussion Paper SP II 2022-204)
| Dietmar Fehr, Dorothea Kübler
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Although there is abundant evidence on individual preferences for policies that reduce national inequality, there is very little evidence on preferences for policies addressing global inequality. To investigate the latter, we conducted a two-year, face-to-face survey experiment on a representative sample of Germans. We measure how individuals form perceptions of their ranks in the national and global ...
In:
American Economic Journal: Economic Policy
14 (2022), 4, 232-268
| Dietmar Fehr, Johanna Mollerstrom, Ricardo Perez-Truglia
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Integrating economic experiments into household surveys provides unique possibilities. We introduce the German Socio-Economic Panel’s Innovation Sample (SOEP-IS), which offers researchers detailed panel data and the possibility to collect personalized experimental and survey data for free. We present the options that this provides and give examples illustrating these options.
In:
Journal of the Economic Science Association
10 (2024), 136-151
| Urs Fischbacher, Levent Neyse, David Richter, Carsten Schröder