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8057 results, from 271
  • Temporary employment and first births: A path analysis of the underlying mechanisms using Australian and German panel data

    In many countries, temporary work is negatively associated with fertility. Yet, the mechanisms underlying this relationship remain poorly understood. This study investigates a range of mediating pathways (subjective and objective financial situation, short tenure, and employment uncertainty) through which temporary work influences first births in two contrasting contexts: Australia and Germany. Event ...

    Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, 2024,
    (Working Paper No. 05/24)
    | Inga Laß, Mooi-Reci, Irma, Bujard Martin, Mark Wooden
  • Immigration, segregation, and attitudes toward immigrants: a longitudinal multiscalar analysis across egohoods

    Evidence on how proximity to ethnic outgroups shapes attitudes toward immigration remains inconclusive. We suggest this may be driven, in part, by the fact that studies rarely account for the role of residential segregation. We argue that how the minority-share in an environment affects majority-group attitudes will depend on how segregated groups are from one another. To explore this, we undertake ...

    In: European Sociological Review 41 (2025), 4, 553-574 | James Laurence, Jan Goebel
  • Essays in Empirical Labour Economics (Dissertation)

    2022, | Philipp Lentge
  • The returns to school-quality-adjusted education of immigrants in Germany

    This paper explores the role of school quality in immigrants’ home countries on their earnings in Germany, using native Germans as a benchmark. We propose an empirical analysis that highlights two important insights. First, there is a substantial gap in the returns to education between natives and immigrants in Germany, especially when we consider the quality of schooling in the source country where ...

    In: Journal for Labour Market Research 56 (2022), 1, 8 | Huy Le-Quang, Ehsan Vallizadeh
  • Fair crack of the whip? The distribution of augmented wealth in Australia from 2002 to 2018

    The omission of pension wealth potentially distorts the international comparison of wealth distributions. Private pension wealth is often included in households’ wealth portfolios, while public pension claims are not. Augmented wealth, the sum of net worth and pension wealth, resolves this limitation by including the present value of social security pension wealth. This article provides a detailed ...

    In: The Journal of Economic Inequality 21 (2023), 4, 835-866 | Maximilian Longmuir
  • How Many Brackets Should We Ask For to Derive Adequate Metric Information for Income and Wealth?

    This paper investigates how the number of brackets and the choice of upper cut-offs in grouped data affect the metric approximation of income and wealth. The literature currently lacks a definition of what should be considered too few brackets or too-low cut-offs. Using German survey data, we show that more than six (eight) brackets and an upper cut-off at the 95th (97th) percentile are sufficient ...

    In: Survey Research Methods 18 (2024), 3, 251-261 | Maximilian Longmuir, Markus M. Grabka
  • Non-native Accents among School Beginners and Teacher Expectations for Future Student Achievements

    Based on sociological, economic, and social-psychological theories of discrimination and bias, this study addresses non-native accents among ethnic minority students as they begin school and explores effects of such accents on their teachers’ achievement expectations. Using a unique data set of first graders in Germany, the analysis reveals that a non-native accent is relevant to teachers’ expectations ...

    In: Sociology of Education 97 (2024), 1, 76-96 | Georg Lorenz, Irena Kogan, Sarah Gentrup, Cornelia Kristen
  • On the robustness of reciprocal associations between personality and religiosity in a German sample

    Objective Entringer et al. used longitudinal data from a German panel study to examine reciprocal causal effects between personality and religiosity, along with cultural moderators of these effects. The current paper examines the robustness of the original effects to alternative model specifications. Method We reanalyzed the same four-wave data spanning 12 years (total N = 46,316), first replicating ...

    In: Journal of Personality 92 (2024), 6, 1649-1667 | Richard E. Lucas, Julia M. Rohrer
  • Neuroticism, emotional stress reactivity and recovery in daily life: Examining extraversion and openness as moderators

    Emotional stressor reactivity and recovery from stressors are associated with the personality trait neuroticism. We examined whether higher extraversion or openness might buffer these associations in daily life. Participants from two age-heterogeneous samples (lifespan: n = 364, aged 14–88 years; late adulthood: n = 170, aged 66–89 years) answered personality questionnaires and reported their momentary ...

    In: Journal of Research in Personality 109 (2024), 104474 | Anna J. Lücke, Oliver K. Schilling, Ute Kunzmann, Denis Gerstorf, Martin Katzorreck-Gierden, Christiane A. Hoppmann, Gloria Luong, Gert G. Wagner, Michaela Riediger, Cornelia Wrzus
  • The Happiness Analyzer: A New Technique for Measuring Subjective Well-Being

    2018, | Kai Ludwigs
8057 results, from 271
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