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Background: So far, studies within the occupational field have largely concentrated on working conditions and job stressors and staff members’ or subordinate health. Only a few have focused on managers in this context, but studies are missing that explicitly look at the relation between leadership position and health care use (HCU). Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine the potential effects ...
In:
Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology
13 (2018), 1, 33
| Katrin Christiane Reber, Hans-Helmut König, André Hajek
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Drawing on data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), this study examines change and stability in personal goal appraisals among German young adults aged 18–29 from 2008, the depth of the Great Recession, to 2012, into the recovery period (N = 3,292). Young adults in Germany, particularly young male workers, were greatly affected by the recession. We examine adaptation in personal appraisals ...
In:
International Journal of Behavioral Development
43 (2019), 2, 147-156
| Claudia Recksiedler, Richard A. Settersten, G. John Geldhof, Karen Hooker
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In:
Energy Economics
29 (2007), 2, 167-182
| Katrin Rehdanz
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In:
Ecological Economics
64 (2008), 4, 787-797
| Katrin Rehdanz, David Maddison
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In:
Oxford Economic Papers
61 (2009), 1, 150-167
| Katrin Rehdanz, David Maddison
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Using representative household survey data from Japan after the Fukushima accident, we estimate peoples' willingness-to-pay (WTP) for renewable, nuclear, and fossil fuels in electricity generation. We rely on random parameter econometric techniques to capture various degrees of heterogeneity between the respondents, and use detailed regional information to assess how WTP varies with the distance ...
In:
Energy Economics
65 (2017), 262-270
| Katrin Rehdanz, Carsten Schröder, Daiju Narita, Toshihiro Okubo
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In:
Fiscal Studies
29 (2008), 3, 329-345
| Katrin Rehdanz, Sven Stöwhase
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In this paper we explore the reasons for the trend reversal in the development of household market income inequality in Germany in the second half of the 2000s. We analyse to what extent the increasing relevance of capital income as well as the rising share of atypically employed persons have affected the development of income inequality over the last two decades. We use household data from the German ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2014,
(SOEPpapers 690)
| Miriam Rehm, Kai Daniel Schmid, Dieter Wang
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Popular support for the welfare state varies greatly across nations and policy domains. We argue that these variations - vital to understanding the politics of the welfare state - reflect in part the degree to which economic disadvantage (low income) and economic insecurity (high risk) are correlated. When the disadvantaged and insecure are mostly one and the same, the base of popular support for the ...
In:
American Political Science Review
106 (2012), 2, 386-406
| Philipp Rehm, Jacob S. Hacker, Mark Schlesinger
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Syracuse:
Syracuse University, Maxwell School,
2002,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 300)
| Günther Rehme