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Due to increased empirical interest in narcissism across social sciences, there is a need for inventories that can be administered quickly while also reliably measuring both the agentic and antagonistic aspects of grandiose narcissism. In this study, we sought to validate the factor structure, provide representative descriptive data and reliability estimates, assess the reliability across the trait ...
In:
Psychological Assessment
30 (2018), 1, 86-96
| Marius Leckelt, Eunike Wetzel, Tanja M. Gerlach, Robert A. Ackermann, Joshua D. Miller, William J. Chopik, Lars Penke, Katharina Geukes, Albrecht C. Küfner, Roos Hutteman, David Richter, Karl-Heinz Renner, Marc Allroggen, Courtney Brecheen, W. Keith Campbell, Igor Grossmann, Mitja D. Back
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Many studies confirm that marriage does not have lasting effects on levels of happiness, whereas divorce induces serious, scarring effects through social stigma. However, few academic efforts have been made regarding how remarriage after divorce impacts the subjective well-being (SWB) of the divorced. Taking into consideration that remarriage often entails regaining social acceptance, this paper examines ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2018,
(SOEPpapers 961)
| Sueheon Lee
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Luxembourg:
Luxembourg Income Study (LIS),
2007,
(Luxembourg Income Study Working Paper No. 457)
| Mathieu Lefèbvre
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In:
Review of Income and Wealth
54 (2008), 4, 513 - 546
| Arnaud Lefranc, Nicolas Pistolesi, Alain Trannoy
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Trends in the gender gap in college completion for the U.S. and Germany show that the gender gap has closed in Germany as it has in the U.S., but, unlike the U.S., women have not yet achieved inequality in rates of tertiary degree attainment, let alone overtaken men. A central reason for this difference is the fact that the relationship between parental education and gender-specific rates of tertiary ...
In:
Schmollers Jahrbuch - SOEP after 25 Years. Proceedings of the 8th International Socio-Economic Panel User Conference
129 (2009), 2, 169-180
| Joschua Legewie, Thomas A. DiPrete
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Conservative welfare state policies as in Germany often presume that money is a common resource within couples and, therefore, pooled. Research, however, indicates that money is increasingly managed separately or partly separately. This trend is either explained by the diversification of forms of relationships or interpreted as a general decline of the joint pooling of money. Contributing to this debate, ...
In:
Social Policy and Society
16 (2017), 2, 199-218
| Yvonne Lott
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How do national-level work–life balance policies shape the role of flextime in maternal labor market re-entry after childbirth? It is well known that such policies influence the adoption, provision, and support of flexible work arrangements by organizations, but whether they shape the relevance of these arrangements for workers has been neglected in past research. This article analyzes whether mothers’ ...
In:
Human Relations
73 (2020), 8, 1106-1128
| Yvonne Lott
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Schedule control can have both positive—e.g., increased income—and negative outcomes—e.g., increased overtime. Here our core interest is whether there are gender discrepancies in these outcomes. Given the different ways in which schedule control can be used, and perceived to be used by men and women, their outcomes are also expected to be different. This is examined using the German Socio-Economic ...
In:
European Sociological Review
32 (2016), 6, 752-765
| Yvonne Lott, Heejung Chung
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While the detrimental health effects of self-perceived job insecurity are well documented, less is known about the mechanisms through which insecurity affects health. In this article, potential explanations for this relationship are examined separately for three age groups (18–35, 36–50, and 51–65). Mediation analyses based on the German Socio-economic Panel show an ‘immediate shock effect’ that occurs ...
In:
Economic and Industrial Democracy
42 (2021), 4, 1105-1122
| Christiane Lübke
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In:
Psychological Science
16 (2005), 12, 945-950
| Richard E. Lucas