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  • An Introduction to Longitudinal Research

    London: Routledge, 2002, | Elisabetta Ruspini
  • Longitudinal Research: An Emergent Method in the Social Sciences

    In: Sharlene Nargy Hesse-Biber, Patricia Leavy , Handbook of Emergent Methods
    New York: Guilford Press
    441-450
    | Elisabetta Ruspini
  • Personality and the Intergenerational Transmission of Educational Attainment: Evidence from Germany

    Research based in the United States, with its relatively open educational system, has found that personality mediates the relationship between parents’ and child’s educational attainment and this mediational pattern is especially beneficial to students from less-educated households. Yet in highly structured, competitive educational systems, personality characteristics may not predict attainment or ...

    In: Journal of Youth and Adolescence 46 (2017), 10, 2181-2193 | Renee Ryberg, Shawn Bauldry, Michael A. Schultz, Annekatrin Steinhoff, Michael Shanahan
  • Measuring the Distribution of Well-Being: Why Income and Consumption Give Different Answers

    Hannover: Universität Hannover, Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften, 1997,
    (Diskussionspapier Nr. 201)
    | John Sabelhaus, Ulrike Schneider
  • Under-Utilisation of Holiday Entitlements as a Career Investment

    The existing literature has provided evidence for the hypothesis that employees work unpaid overtime, because they regard it as an investment in their career. I show that the determinants of the under-utilisation of holiday entitlements in the United Kingdom and Germany are widely similar to those of unpaid overtime work. The main finding of the study is that the investment hypothesis determines this ...

    Berlin: German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), 2005,
    (DIW Research Notes 7)
    | Christian Saborowski
  • Social influences on trajectories of self-rated health: evidence from Britain, Germany, Denmark and the United States

    Background: We investigate social inequalities in self-rated health dynamics for working-aged adults in four nations, representing distinct welfare regime types. The aims are to: describe average national trajectories of self-rated health over a 7-year period; identify social determinants of cross-sectional and longitudinal health; and compare cross-national patterns. Methods: Data are from national ...

    In: Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 65 (2011), 2, 130-136 | Amanda Sacker, Diana Worts, Peggy McDonough
  • Residential Segregation and Socioeconomic Neighbourhood Sorting: Evidence at the Micro-neighbourhood Level for Migrant Groups in Germany

    This paper assesses the residential segregation of German immigrants from Turkey, Italy, the Balkans and eastern Europe with a special focus on the link between social and ethnic segregation. Microdata from the German Socioeconomic Panel Study (SOEP) are used. A new dataset provided by the microm Micromarketing-Systeme und Consult GmbH makes accessible information on participants’ immediate residential ...

    In: Urban Studies 49 (2012), 12, 2617-2632 | Lutz Sager
  • Poverty in Europe in the mid-1990s: the effectiveness of means-tested benefits

    This article examines the income maintenance policies of several members of the European Union and three candidate countries: the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland. It addresses the issue of the effectiveness of these policies and especially means-tested safety nets in alleviating poverty. To assess the effectiveness of the policies, we use data from the Luxembourg Income Study. We analyse the incidence ...

    In: Journal of European Social Policy 12 (2002), 4, 307-327 | Diane Sainsbury, Ann Morissens
  • Long-distance spatial mobility in Western Germany. A comparison between minorities of Turkish ancestry and native Germans

    This paper examines the spatial mobility incentives and constrains of minorities of Turkish ancestry compared to natives between counties in Western Germany based on 10 waves (2000-2009) of the SOEP. Given that ethnic groups systematically differ from natives in characteristics like risk aversion due to their international migration experience, it has been assumed that regarding internal migration ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2012,
    (SOEPpapers 495)
    | Belit Şaka
  • Internal Migration of Immigrants: Evidence from Western Germany

    This paper deals with the internal migration patterns of the immigrant population in Germany and addresses the question of whether immigrants are more mobile than native Germans and to what extent the differences in spatial mobility behavior between immigrants and native Germans are influenced by (a) individual level characteristics and (b) the regional economic and social context background. The analysis ...

    In: Schmollers Jahrbuch 133 (2013), 2, 215-226 | Belit Şaka
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