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This study analyzed the association between work-family life courses and life satisfaction among 2,542 women aged 60–65 years (born between 1920 and 1957) using German SOEP data and ANOVA models. The results are embedded in a description of the specific role of mothers in Germany (as primary caregivers), different theoretical assumptions (from role theories and theories on cumulative advantages and ...
In:
Journal of Family Issues
42 (2021), 5, 1029-1054
| Okka Zimmermann
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SOEP Survey Papers 922: Series D - Variable Description and Coding / 2020
2020| Markus M. Grabka
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Nürnberg:
Bundesamt für Migration und Flüchtlinge (BAMF),
2020,
(BAMF-Brief Analysis 2|2020)
| Manuel Siegert
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This study examines educational reproduction of East and West German men and women born between 1930 and 1950. In a prospective design, we study the importance of mobility and fertility pathways of reproduction, considering not only the social reproduction of education as an attribute but also the demographic reproduction of individuals who carry this attribute. Using data from NEPS and SOEP, we introduce ...
In:
Demography
57 (2020), 4, 1241-1270
| Jan Skopek, Thomas Leopold
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Background: Against the backdrop of rising statutory retirement age in Germany, we analyzed time trends in self-rated health (SRH) among the elderly population between 50 and 70 years of age and explored the mediating role of leisure time physical activity (LTPA) on the relationship between time period and self-rated health (SRH). Methods: We used longitudinal survey data (n = 23,161) from a national ...
In:
BMC Public Health
20 (2020), 1, 113
| Stefanie Sperlich, Johannes Beller, Jelena Epping, Juliane Tetzlaff, Siegfried Geyer
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This study aims to determine to what extent the opportunities and restrictions of the partner market influence educational assortative mating. It also analyzes the interplay between the opportunity structure and preferences. Matching district-based partner market indicators to heterosexual couples when they move in together based on the German Socio-Economic Panel, we find strong effects of the opportunity ...
In:
Journal of Family Issues
42 (2021), 11, 2554-2588
| Johannes Stauder, Tom Kossow
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Abstract The role of the “Big Five” personality traits in driving welfare state attitudes has received scant attention in social policy research. Yet neuroticism in particular—a disposition to stress, worry, and get nervous easily—is theoretically likely to be an important driver of welfare attitudes precisely because welfare states deliver social “security” and “safety” nets. Using cross-sectional ...
In:
Social Policy & Administration
54 (2020), 5, 699-718
| Markus Tepe, Pieter Vanhuysse
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This article studies the relationship between partner’s wealth share and their life satisfaction in different-sex couples using the German Socio-Economic Panel Study (2002, 2007, 2012, and 2017). Resource-based theories and gender ideology are two prominent approaches to explain the effects of within-couple relative resources on various outcomes. Recently, scholars have argued that not relative but ...
In:
European Sociological Review
37 (2021), 2, 271-286
| Daria Tisch
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Psychological measures are gaining recognition as important determinants of labor performance. This paper demonstrates that people reporting greater subjective well-being (SWB) are causally less likely to be unemployed in the future. The relation exhibits a meaningful magnitude relative to the mean unemployment rate and other determinants. The analysis is based on a longitudinal survey of German households ...
In:
Kyklos
73 (2020), 4, 568-604
| Kelsey J. O'Connor
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This study examines the relationships between loneliness, gender, and age for people without and with disabilities (moderate versus severe) in Germany. Using data taken from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) for the years 2013 and 2017 and using the UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) Loneliness Scale, in general we found that males report lower loneliness scores as compared to those ...
In:
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
17 (2020), 24, 9176
| Ricardo Pagan