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Decades of research have identified average patterns of normative personality development across the lifespan. However, it is unclear how well these correspond to trajectories of individual development. Past work beyond general personality development might suggest these average patterns are oversimplifications, necessitating novel examinations of how personality develops and consideration of new individual ...
In:
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
(2024),
| Amanda J. Wright, Joshua J. Jackson
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Currently, there is no theory that identifies the ideal personality type for sports coaches. The study’s goal is to gain insight into the personalities of German basketball coaches and use existing study results from other professional groups to make recommendations for the content of coaches’ education. Given the German Olympic Sports Federation’s emphasis on comprehensive coach education that includes ...
In:
German Journal of Exercise and Sport Research
54 (2024), 354-365
| Johannes Wunder, Maximilian Priem, Gert G. Wagner, Oliver Stoll
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A negative reputation shock to one charity can affect similar charities positively through substitution, or negatively through collective reputation. Using sentiment analysis on media coverage, I identify large shocks and link directly affected charities to other charities by the textual similarity of their missions. I find that a negative shock increases donations to similar charities, but this effect ...
2022,
(SSRN Working Paper)
| Derrick Xu
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Living space needs to be heated in winter and partially cooled in summer and the construction of new buildings requires high amounts of energy and materials. Total living space is increasing, driven by continuously rising average per-capita spaces. The reasons for this are numerous and include the trend to smaller households who live in larger flats, increasing numbers of single-family houses, elderly ...
In:
eceee Summer Study Proceedings
(2024), 979-989
| Johannes Thema, Luisa Cordroch, Johannes Parschau, Georg Graser, Frauke Wiese
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We investigate the impact of the Berlin Wall's fall on West Berliners' salaries using the Synthetic Control Method and regional-level data (NUTS-2) from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Our study shows that the collapse of the Berlin Wall led to a sudden stagnation in salaries for West Berliners, compared to a scenario where the Wall had remained intact.
In:
Applied Economics Letters
(online first) (2024), 1-4
| Sergi Urzay-Gómez
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The “modern” gender vote gap – where women are generally more supportive of left parties than men – is established in many Western democracies. Whilst it is linked to societal changes, and in particular the transformation of gender roles and relations, scholars still grapple with its underlying mechanisms. This paper tests one mechanism currently untested in existing accounts: that women’s specific ...
In:
Comparative Political Studies
(online first) (2024), 00104140241271123
| Mathilde M. van Ditmars, Rosalind Shorrocks
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OBJECTIVES: SARS-CoV-2 infections were unequally distributed during the pandemic, with those in disadvantaged socioeconomic positions being at higher risk. Little is known about the underlying mechanism of this association. This study assessed to what extent educational differences in SARS-CoV-2 infections were mediated by working from home. METHODS: We used data of the German working population derived ...
In:
Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health
50 (2024), 3, 168-177
| Benjamin Wachtler, Florian Beese, Ibrahim Demirer, Sebastian Haller, Timo-Kolja Pförtner, Morten Wahrendorf, Markus M. Grabka, Jens Hoebel
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This article examines the evolution of the gender wealth gap in Germany during the first decade of the XXI century. This period is characterized by an increase in labour supply of women and change in occupational structure due to numerous reforms undertaken by the government. We use the Firpo, Fortin, Lemieux detailed decomposition technique throughout the wealth distribution to identify the main factors ...
In:
B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy
24 (2024), 4, 1045-1071
| Eva Sierminska, Daniela Piazzalunga, Markus Grabka
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Background: If a new job is located in a different region from the place of residence, individuals or households can choose between moving or commuting. However, so far mobility alternatives and their drivers remain under-researched from a comparative perspective. Objective: We investigate the determinants of the mobility choices of individuals who have taken a distant job (50 km or more), considering ...
In:
Demographic Research
50 (2024), 33, 967-1004
| Thomas Skora, Heiko Rüger, Knut Petzold
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This study investigates the impact of sexual orientation on earnings in the German labour market. Using data from the Socio-Economic Panel survey from the year 2020, I analyse wage differentials between heterosexual and non-heterosexual workers. The findings reveal that nonheterosexual men earn approximately 7.7%less than their heterosexual counterparts, while lesbian or bisexual women experience a ...
2024,
| Jiayi Song