Publications Based on SOEP Data: SOEPlit

clear
0 filter(s) selected
close
Go to page
remove add
6847 results, from 361
  • Measurement Instruments for Fast and Frequent Data Collection During the Early Phase of COVID-19 in Germany: Reflections on the Mannheim Corona Study

    The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has led to a vast increase in the demand for fast, frequent, and multi-faceted data to study the impact of the pandemic on people’s lives. Existing data collection infrastructures had to be adapted quickly during the early phase of the pandemic to meet this data demand. Our research group contributed to this by conducting the Mannheim Corona Study (MCS), a longitudinal ...

    In: Measurement Instruments for the Social Sciences 4 (2022), 1, | Carina Cornesse, Marisabel González Ocanto, Marina Fikel, Sabine Friedel, Ulrich Krieger, Tobias Rettig, Annelies G. Blom
  • The Diverging Trends of Male and Female Bottom Earnings in Germany

    Men at the bottom quintile of the German male earnings distribution had lower average earnings in 2019 than in 2001. In contrast, female earnings have increased throughout the distribution. What explains these diverging trends and how did they translate into changes in net income? Data from the Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) reveal that the drop in bottom male earnings is mostly due to a decrease in work ...

    Bonn: Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), 2024,
    (IZA DP No. 17567)
    | Eliana Coschignano, Robin Jessen
  • The relationship between leisure-time physical activity and job satisfaction: A dynamic panel data approach

    Objective: Previous research has documented a positive effect of leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) on life satisfaction. The relationship between physical activity and the specific domain of job satisfaction is, however, relatively unknown. This study aims to investigate the effects of different frequency levels of LTPA on self-reported job satisfaction and specifically focuses on the two mechanisms ...

    In: Journal of Occupational Health 65 (2023), 1, e12382 | Sören Dallmeyer, Pamela Wicker, Christoph Breuer
  • Affordable Housing and Individual Labor Market Outcomes

    We investigate the employment effects of living in affordable housing. We develop a unique administrative data set of labor market biographies linked to affordable housing projects in five German cities. This allows us to follow individuals in affordable housing over almost 20 years. The funding scheme is similar to the American LIHTC program, so the results are applicable beyond Germany. We use an ...

    Bonn: Institute of Labor Economics (IZA), 2024,
    (IZA Discussion Papers No. 17359)
    | Wolfgang Dauth, Andreas Mense, Matthias Wrede
  • Growing or declining penalties? A cross-temporal analysis of unemployment scars in the German labor market

    We know that unemployment leaves scars. Unemployment scars are the penalties in terms of employment outcomes that workers experience due to past unemployment. To date we lack a long-term longitudinal account which examines how unemployment scarring has developed over time. The aim of this article is to fill this gap. We draw on longitudinal data from the German Socio-Economic Panel spanning a period ...

    In: Social Science Research 121 (2024), 102960 | Martina Dieckhoff, Johannes Giesecke
  • How Often Have You Felt Disadvantaged? Explaining Perceived Discrimination

    Im Rahmen einer Längsschnittanalyse des sozio-oekonomischen Panels gehen wir der Frage nach, wie sich Diskriminierungswahrnehmungen von Einwanderern und ihren Nachkommen im Laufe des Integrationsprozesses verändern. Insgesamt betrachtet fühlen sich Migrantinnen und Migranten, deren Integration weiter fortgeschritten ist, seltener aufgrund ihrer Herkunft benachteiligt. Allerdings zeigen gruppenspezifische ...

    In: Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie (KZfSS) 73 (2021), 1, 1-24 | Claudia Diehl, Elisabeth Liebau, Peter Mühlau
  • Selective re-partnering? Mental health and life satisfaction among separated single mothers in Germany and the UK

    This study examines the potential influence of selection on the association between re-partnering and single mothers’ mental health and life satisfaction in Germany and the United Kingdom. Drawing on extensive longitudinal panel data, we analyze the trajectories of 1694 separated single mothers in Germany (SOEP) and 1070 in the UK (BHPS/UKHLS). Employing fixed effects models, we examine the outcomes ...

    In: Acta Sociologica (online first) (2025), | Philipp Dierker, Mine Kühn, Mikko Myrskylä
  • Hunkering Down or Catching Up? No Long-Term Effect of Ethnic Minority Share on Neighborhood Contacts

    This study reexamines the relationship between the coexistence of distinct ethno-cultural groups and social connectedness. Although previous research suggests a negative association between neighborhood-level ethnic diversity or ethnic minority shares and individual integration, alternative theoretical perspectives propose that integration can occur equally well in neighborhoods with distinct ethnic ...

    In: sociological science 11 (2024), 965-988 | Stephan Dochow-Sanderhaus
  • Digital Family Access and Depressive Tendency in Rural Children: Digital Usages as A Mediator

    Given the the digital era, mental health of rural children is of particular concern. Taking a total of 314 rural children in Linquan County, Fuyang City, Anhui Province, as survey respondents, and using a combination of descriptive statistics, correlation and regression analysis, this study aimed to explore the effects of digital family access on rural children's depressive tendency, and to analyse ...

    In: Journal of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences 40 (2024), 164-176 | Yinan Dong, Jing Zhao, Liping Ma
  • Parent-child mismatches in educational aspirations: Prevalence, stability, and convergence over time

    Parent-child mismatches in educational aspirations may negatively affect child development. We examine 1) the prevalence of mismatching aspirations across school grades 3–9 (ages 8–15), 2) their stability over time, and 3) whether mismatching aspirations converge to parents’ or to children’s aspirations. This study uses data from two German National Educational Panel Study cohorts (“kindergarten”: ...

    PsyArXiv, 2024,
    (PsyArXiv Preprints)
    | Jascha Dräger, Kaspar Burger
6847 results, from 361
keyboard_arrow_up