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  • Life Satisfaction and Endogenous Aspirations

    Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (N = 13,145), we investigate the effects of (not) achieving aspirations on subjective well-being. We match individual-level data about life satisfaction aspirations with their subsequent realizations and we jointly estimate two panel-data equations, the first depicting the effects that (not) achieving initial aspirations exerts on the subsequent level ...

    Berlin: DIW Berlin, 2015,
    (SOEPpapers 761)
    | Marco Bertoni, Luca Corazzini
  • Asymmetric affective forecasting errors and their correlation with subjective well-being

    Aims Social scientists have postulated that the discrepancy between achievements and expectations affects individuals' subjective well-being. Still, little has been done to qualify and quantify such a psychological effect. Our empirical analysis assesses the consequences of positive and negative affective forecasting errors—the difference between realized and expected subjective well-being—on ...

    In: PLOS ONE 13 (2018), 3, | Marco Bertoni, Luca Corazzini
  • Overview of Child Well Being in Germany: Policy Towards a Supportive Environment for Children (Zur Lage der Kinder in Deutschland: Politik für Kinder als Zukunftsgestaltung)

    Florence: Unicef Innocenti Research Centre, 2006,
    (Innocenti Working Papers 2006-02)
    | Hans Bertram
  • Cohort Profile: The Berlin Aging Study II (BASE-II)

    Similar to other industrialized countries, Germany’s population is ageing. Whereas some people enjoy good physical and cognitive health into old age, others suffer from a multitude of age-related disorders and impairments which reduce life expectancy and affect quality of life. To identify and characterize the factors associated with ‘healthy’ vs. ‘unhealthy’ ageing, we have launched the Berlin Aging ...

    In: International Journal of Epidemiology 43 (2014), 3, 703-712 | Lars Bertram, Anke Böckenhoff, Ilja Demuth, Sandra Düzel, Rahel Eckardt, Shu-Chen Li, Ulman Lindenberger, Graham Pawelec, Thomas Siedler, Gert G. Wagner, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen
  • Does Personality Matter? Personality factors as determinants of legislative recruitment and legislators’ policrecruitment and policy preferences

    The paper inquires into the impact of personality-factors on the selection and self-selection of recruits for parliamentary mandates by comparing the personality profile of German MPs with a matching sample of the general population (matching in terms of education, gender, age and party preferences). It further determines whether MPs personality has an impact on their policy preferences (expansionist ...

    2008, | Heinrich Best
  • How Selective Migration Shapes Environmental Inequality in Germany: Evidence from Micro-level Panel Data

    Socio-economically disadvantaged and ethnic minorities are affected by a disproportionately high exposure to environmental pollution. Yet, it is unclear if selective migration causes this disproportionate exposure experienced by low-income and minority households. The study uses longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel to investigate the process of selective migration and its connection ...

    In: European Sociological Review 34 (2018), 1, 52-63 | Henning Best, Tobias Rüttenauer
  • Risk Attitudes, Job Mobility and Subsequent Wage Growth During the Early Career

    Job change is a decision under uncertainty: It is associated with costs whereas the decision is made without full knowledge about future benefits. In order to investigate the relationship between willingness to take risks and job mobility, we first extend a model for on-the-job search with nonwage job characteristics by including heterogeneity in risk attitudes. Second, we empirically test the model's ...

    Mannheim: Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung (ZEW), 2017,
    (ZEW Discussion Paper No. 17-023)
    | Argaw Bethlehem, Michael F. Maier, Olga J. Skriabikova
  • Fostering Equality of Opportunity? Compulsory Schooling Reform and Social Mobility in Germany

    There is an ongoing debate in the field of social mobility research about whether intergenerational social mobility can be increased by way of education policy. However, evidence on the effects of specific education policies on social mobility continues to be scarce. This article analyses the effect of one specific policy reform, the extension of compulsory schooling in Germany, which has been argued ...

    In: European Sociological Review 33 (2017), 5, 633-644 | Bastian Betthäuser
  • The Effect of the Post-Socialist Transition on Inequality of Educational Opportunity: Evidence from German Unification

    In 1990, German unification led to an abrupt and extensive restructuring of the educational system and economy of the German Democratic Republic (GDR) as the latter was reintegrated into the Federal Republic of Germany (FRG). However, the consequences of this large-scale institutional change for the educational inequality between children from different social class backgrounds in East Germany continue ...

    In: European Sociological Review 35 (2019), 4, 461-473 | Bastian A Betthäuser
  • Left behind? Over-time change in the social mobility of children from unskilled working-class backgrounds in Germany

    Research on intergenerational social mobility tends to focus on examining the level of overall social fluidity in society. However, from a social justice perspective it can be argued that the type of social fluidity that matters most is upward mobility from the lowest rung of the social ladder. This article examines the labour market chances of children from parents in unskilled working-class positions, ...

    In: Acta Sociologica 63 (2020), 2, 133-155 | Bastian A. Betthäuser
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