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A large body of literature highlights the benefits of being religious in terms of subjective well-being. We examine changes to these so-called religious well-being benefits during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany and address the role of (formal and informal) social integration when explaining these changes. We empirically test two contrasting scenarios: The first scenario predicts ...
In:
Journal of Happiness Studies
25 (2024), 7, 103
| Jan-Philip Steinmann, Hannes Kröger, Jörg Hartmann, Theresa M. Entringer
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Abstract: Our study investigated gender role attitudes in narcissism. Using a representative data set (N = 2,850) from the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) in Germany, we examined how two narcissism dimensions (i.e., admiration and rivalry) are related to managers’ gender role attitudes. We also expected that having a daughter is related to less traditional gender role attitudes (daughter effect) and tested ...
In:
Journal of Personnel Psychology
(online first) (2024),
| Anna-Katharina Stöcker, Iris Katharina Gauglitz, Astrid Schütz
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The free movement of people is a fundamental principle of the European Union (EU) that has led to an increase in EU-internal migration. This study investigates the impact of increased immigration to Germany resulting from the 2004 and 2007 eastern enlargement of the EU on concerns about immigration within the German population. By merging 20 years of annual migration statistics with panel data on individual ...
In:
European Journal of Political Research
63 (2024), 4, 1578-1600
| Lukas F. Stoetzer, Martin Kroh, Leonard Dasey
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While there is a growing body of research suggesting that care leavers experience disadvantages in early adulthood. There is only one study at hand, that use panel data to analyze long term effects. Based on this idea, we examine data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP), covering a 50-year period, and use matching methods to compare care leavers who have been in residential care or lived with ...
In:
Residential Treatment For Children & Youth
(online first) (2024), 1-25
| Markus N. Sauerwein, Gunther Graßhoff
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Although the structure of subjective well-being (SWB) has been examined in various studies, no consensus on its structure has yet been reached. This may be due to a neglect of the construct's dynamic aspects and domain satisfaction as a core aspect of SWB. This article aims to overcome existing research gaps by applying network modeling to longitudinal data of 32,700 adults (24-64 years old) from ...
PsyArXiv,
2024,
(PsyArXiv Preprints)
| Bernd Schaefer, Peter Haehner, Maike Luhmann
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We study the effect of education on health (hospital stays, number of diagnosed conditions, self-rated poor health, and obesity) over the life-cycle in Germany, using compulsory schooling reforms as a source of exogenous variation. Our results suggest a positive correlation of health and education which increases over the life-cycle. We do not, however, find any positive local average treatment effects ...
Essen:
RWI - Leibniz-Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung,
2023,
(Ruhr Economic Papers #1006)
| Hendrik Schmitz, Beatrice Baaba Tawiah
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During the COVID-19 pandemic, people had two important but imperfect teachers of risk. First, they learned about incidence, mortality rates, and reproduction numbers from reports and graphs. Second, they learned about the risk of infection through their own experience and the experience of others. Personal experience has been found to serve as an input for risk judgments in numerous contexts, including ...
In:
Journal of Risk Research
27 (2024), 3, 438-457
| Michael Schulte-Mecklenbeck, Gert G. Wagner, Ralph Hertwig
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Wie entwickelt sich die Persönlichkeit mit dem Alter? Obwohl diese Frage in der Forschung großes Interesse erlangt hat, besteht weiterhin Unsicherheit über die genaue Altersentwicklung der Persönlichkeit. Die vorliegende Dissertation umfasst zwei Artikel, die sich mit heterogenen Befunden zum Einfluss des Alters auf verschiedene Konzepte von Stabilität und Veränderung der Big-Five-Persönlichkeitseigenschaften ...
2024,
| Ingo Sven Seifert
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Like all modern Western societies, Germany is a multilingual country. While German is the most widely spoken language, both as a first language and as an everyday language, residents who do not have German as their first language but another language (or several other languages) and/or who use another language (or several other languages) in their everyday life besides, are estimated to make up about ...
In:
Alexandra N. Lenz, Barbara Soukup, Wolfgang Koppensteiner ,
Standard Languages in Germanic-Speaking Europe: Attitudes and Perception (Standard Language Ideology in Contemporary Europe 4)
Oslo: Novus Press
121-150
| Albrecht Plewnia
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Background The governments of democracies worldwide are relying on the active cooperation of their populations to combat COVID-19. Simultaneously, beliefs in conspiracy theories surrounding the pandemic have flourished. The present article examines the effects of the big five personality traits and conspiracy beliefs on the intention to get vaccinated against COVID-19 in Germany. Methods This correlational, ...
In:
Journal of Infection and Public Health
17 (2024), 9, 102519
| Stefan Poier, Anna Maria Nikodemska-Wołowik