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The relationship between people’s transnational ties and practices and their social position is subject to a controversial debate that suggests a dualistic picture. While there seems to exist a group of highly educated people who benefit from transnational mobility and networks, for migrants the maintenance of transnational ties to their ‘old homes’ appears to lead to a social mobility trap, and thus ...
Bielefeld:
Universität Bielefeld,
2012,
(SFB 882 Working Paper Series No. 11)
| Margit Fauser, Sven Voigtländer, Hidayet Tuncer, Elisabeth Liebau, Thomas Faist, Oliver Razum
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We live in a time of increasing publication rates and specialization of scientific disciplines. More and more, the research community is facing the challenge of assuring the quality of research and maintaining trust in the scientific enterprise. Replication studies are necessary to detect erroneous research. Thus, the replicability of research is considered a hallmark of good scientific practice and ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2016,
(SOEPpapers 839)
| Benedikt Fecher, Mathis Fräßdorf, Gert G. Wagner
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Despite widespread support from policy makers, funding agencies, and scientific journals, academic researchers rarely make their research data available to others. At the same time, data sharing in research is attributed a vast potential for scientific progress. It allows the reproducibility of study results and the reuse of old data for new research questions. Based on a systematic review of 98 scholarly ...
In:
PLoS ONE
10 (2015), 2, e0118053
| Benedikt Fecher, Sascha Friesike, Marcel Hebing
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Academic data sharing is a way for researchers to collaborate and thereby meet the needs of an increasingly complex research landscape. It enables researchers to verify results and to pursuit new research questions with “old” data. It is therefore not surprising that data sharing is advocated by funding agencies, journals, and researchers alike. We surveyed 2661 individual academic researchers across ...
Berlin:
DIW Berlin,
2015,
(DIW Discussion Papers No. 1454)
| Benedikt Fecher, Sascha Friesike, Marcel Hebing, Stephanie Linek, Armin Sauermann
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In this article we argue that the current endeavors to achieve open access in scientific literature require a discussion about innovation in scholarly publishing and research infrastructure. Drawing on path dependence theory and addressing different open access (OA) models and recent political endeavors, we argue that academia is once again running the risk of outsourcing the organization of its c ...
In:
| Benedikt Fecher, Gert G. Wagner
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In:
Science
351 (2016), 6280, 1405-1406
| Benedikt Fecher, Gert G. Wagner
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In the past decade, old age security policies have aimed at providing incentives to prolong employment and change eligibility rules to reduce early retirement options; these are known as Active Ageing measures. Research reveals that extended working lives have altered exit patterns towards a prolongation of the late employment phase. This paper draws on conditions in the organisation of work in the ...
In:
Sozialer Fortschritt
68 (2019), 4, 313–338
| Charlotte Fechter
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With its “Wellbeing in Germany – what matters to us” initiative, the federal government is turning its attention to the issue of wellbeing. It is designed to provide a benchmark for effective policymaking. But how do people define “wellbeing”? The government initiated a national dialogue to find the answer to this question. It revealed that people have a very broad and diverse view of what constitutes ...
Berlin:
Die Bundesregierung,
2017,
| Federal Chancellery / Bundeskanzleramt (Hrsg.)
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Berlin:
BMFSFJ,
2004,
| Senior Citizens Federal Ministry of Family Affairs, Youth (ed.)
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This study provides novel evidence on the relevance of task content changes between and within occupations to wage dynamics of occupational changers and stayers. I use individual‐level, cross‐sectional data featuring tasks performed on the job to compute a measure of proximity of job contents. Then, I merge this measure to a large‐scale panel survey to show that occupational changers experience a wage ...
In:
German Economic Review
20 (2019), 4, e295-e328
| Alexandra Fedorets