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8302 results, from 581
  • Too worried about the environment to have children? Or more worried about the environment after having children?

    Amid rising concerns about climate change, in recent years, demographers have increasingly examined whether environmental concerns have become a factor in shaping reproductive intentions and outcomes. However, little is still known about the potentially reciprocal relationship between environmental concerns and fertility, in part due to the lack of longitudinal analyses of sufficient temporal scope. ...

    In: Population and Environment 47 (2025), 3, 31 | Steffen Peters, Erich Striessnig, Alessandra Trimarchi, Maria Rita Testa, Natalie Nitsche
  • Should I buy or should I go? The effect of the big five personality traits and satisfaction with life on E-bike ownership in Germany

    A prerequisite for sustainable mobility is the move away from fossil fuels. In addition to the transportation sector and public transport, the electrification of individual transport also contributes to the mobility transition. In the present study, we conducted exploratory structural equation modelling using data (n = 14,008) from a large-scale nationwide household panel in Germany to investigate ...

    In: Transport Policy 162 (2025), 188–199 | Stefan Poier, Anna Maria Nikodemska-Wołowik, Michał Suchanek
  • Surveying emigrants worldwide–using Facebook and Instagram to recruit respondents in cross-national (e)migration research

    Sampling remains a major challenge when researching minority populations, especially in cross-national settings. While various sampling methods are established in the field, most of them cannot easily be implemented globally. However, worldwide operating Social Networking Sites provide an opportunity for the recruitment of certain hard-to-reach populations in almost all countries. Targeting German ...

    In: Comparative Migration Studies 13 (2025), 1, 56 | Steffen Pötzschke, Bernd Weiß
  • Spatial income inequality in Rajasthan using small area estimation model

    India has emerged as the fastest-growing nation in recent years, and rising inequality may obstruct this path, leading to serious socio-economic challenges. This situation has raised the demand for micro-level data among policymakers to facilitate effective decentralised planning and reduce regional disparity. However, the survey data is not ideal for understanding disparities at the disaggregated ...

    In: Review of Regional Research (2025), | Bharat Diwakar Preeti
  • Perceived expectations for active aging: the role of motivational and personality factors

    Perceived expectations for active aging (PEAA) reflect subjective exposure to social expectations about staying active and fit in old age, for example, by maintaining health and social engagement. We investigated whether motivational and personality factors were related to PEAA in the domains of physical health, mental health, and social engagement. We used a nationally representative sample of German ...

    In: Aging & Mental Health 28 (2024), 11, 1559–1566 | Sonja Radoš, Maria K. Pavlova, Klaus Rothermund, Rainer K. Silbereisen
  • Response Bias in the Gender Gap in Non-Market Work

    Despite increasing female labor force participation, gender differences in non-market work, such as housework and childcare, persist. By exploiting exogenous variation in the questionnaire of the German Socio-Economic Panel, I analyze how response behavior affects estimates of time use in a longitudinal setting. I find a causal impact of questionnaire design on the reported hours of non-market work ...

    In: German Economic Review (online first) (2025), | Mara Rebaudo
  • Manifestations of (Mis)Recognition Amongst Germany-based Refugee Women from Ukraine

    This research focuses on 10 case studies drawn from a corpus of 50 interviews with displaced Ukrainian women based in Berlin and Frankfurt/Oder and considers the extent to which Ukrainian refugee women arriving in Germany over the last two years might have experienced misrecognition within their everyday experiences. Following Honneth’s (1996) understanding of recognition in terms of self-confidence, ...

    In: Journal of International Migration and Integration (2025), | Jonna Rock, Rob Sharp
  • Personality Traits and the Likelihood of Self-Employment: A Journey into the Crafts’ Way of Doing Business

    Given the renewed scholarly interest in the crafts, this paper explores the nuances of crafts entrepreneurship through a personality-based approach. Our findings validate prior research on the general influence of broad and narrow personality traits on self-employment. However, our analysis also suggests that certain effects differ between crafts and non-crafts, most notably the role of the Big Five ...

    In: German Economic Review 26 (2025), 3, 229–265 | Petrik Runst, Jörg Thomä
  • Non-Formal Education and Life Satisfaction

    2026,
    (IZA DP No. 18474)
    | Li Kathrin Kaja Rupieper, Stephan Thomsen
  • Terrorism and Voting: The Rise of Right-Wing Populism in Germany

    Can right-wing terrorism increase support for far-right populist parties, and if so, why? Exploiting quasi-random variation between successful and failed attacks across German municipalities, we find that successful attacks lead to significant increases in the vote share for the right-wing, populist Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party. Our results are predominantly observable in state (Bundesland) ...

    In: American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 17 (2025), 3, 407–40 | Navid Sabet, Marius Liebald, Guido Friebel
8302 results, from 581
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