94 results on '"3317 Demography"'
Search Results
2. Disentangling the interplay of the sense of belonging and institutional channels in individuals' educational trajectories
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Burger, Kaspar, University of Zurich, and Burger, Kaspar
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Male ,Adult ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,course Studies ,Schools ,Academic Success ,Adolescent ,3317 Demography ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,span and Life ,Young Adult ,Life ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Educational Status ,Female ,370 Education ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Students ,10095 Institute of Sociology ,10190 Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development ,Demography - Abstract
Accumulating evidence indicates that students' sense of school belonging has a substantial positive effect on educational attainment. At the same time, life course and life span developmental theories suggest that the benefits of a sense of school belonging could be weakened by the channeling effects of education systems that assign students to distinct educational tracks that lead otherwise similar students to quite different educational destinations. The current study analyzed the extent to which the sense of school belonging predicted educational trajectories in a system that partially channels students into distinct tracks. It assessed educational trajectories as they relate to transitions at two critical junctures of the system-the transition from lower- to upper-secondary education, and from upper-secondary to tertiary (university) education. The study used data from a nationally representative panel survey that followed participants from age 15 to 30 (
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- 2022
3. Fiscal solidarity: The conditional role of political knowledge
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Armingeon, Klaus, University of Zurich, and Armingeon, Klaus
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political knowledge ,Health (social science) ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,health(social science) ,Economic policy ,Member states ,3317 Demography ,Eu countries ,Fiscal union ,Solidarity ,demography Eurozone ,Politics ,3320 Political Science and International Relations ,Order (exchange) ,Political science ,320 Political science ,Political Science and International Relations ,Pandemic ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,fiscal union ,solidarity ,3306 Health (social science) ,Demography - Abstract
In order to cope with the economic fall-out from the COVID-19 pandemic, the EU countries hit hardest by the virus requested fiscal support from the other EU member states. Likewise, the Eurozone arguably depends on some form of a fiscal union. This international redistribution critically depends on citizens’ support. Do politically knowledgeable citizens develop preferences for fiscal redistribution that are different from those of ignorant citizens? Based on the 2014 European Election Study, this article argues that knowledge plays a limited and conditional role. It hardly exerts a systematic independent effect. Rather, it helps crystallize party cues and basic European integration values. My findings are consistent with a theory, according to which knowledge eases the process of rationalizing preferences that originate in previous basic orientations.
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- 2020
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4. Restricted religion. Compliance, vicariousness, and authority during the Corona pandemic in Switzerland
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Rafael Walthert, Laura Vanessa Peter, Loic Bawidamann, University of Zurich, and Walthert, Rafael
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Government ,Constitution ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Sociology of religion ,3317 Demography ,050109 social psychology ,Islam ,0506 political science ,Compliance (psychology) ,10277 Institute of Religious Studies ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,State (polity) ,Order (exchange) ,Law ,Political science ,Pandemic ,050602 political science & public administration ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,200 Religion ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
The wide-reaching government restrictions in the fight against COVID-19 are compelling religious communities in Switzerland to modify their ritual practice in order to comply with the state's stipulations. With a focus on religious authority following Bourdieu, this paper researches the ritual modifications in the Roman Catholic Church and an Islamic organisation via the three categories of change, shift, and cancellation. Modifications were implemented to avoid the cancellation of public rituals which highlights their importance. As it finally became inevitable, the decision-makers within the two communities were confronted with the need to justify their compliance to state rules within the community and towards the secular outside world. This paper shows that the constitution of religious authority in response to ritual restrictions is dependent on the degree of establishment within the societal context and the division of religious labour in the community.
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- 2020
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5. Navigating the Aegean Sea: smartphones, transnational activism and viapolitical in(ter)ventions in contested maritime borderzones
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Noori, Simon, University of Zurich, and Noori, Simon
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05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,Media studies ,3317 Demography ,0506 political science ,10122 Institute of Geography ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,ICTS ,910 Geography & travel ,050703 geography ,Demography ,Border crossing - Abstract
Scholars concerned with the use of ICTs at the EU’s external borders have mainly focused on practices of control that draw on sophisticated surveillance technologies. In this paper I address migran...
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- 2020
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6. Developmental patterns of respiratory sinus arrhythmia from toddlerhood to adolescence
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Nicole B. Perry, Jessica M. Dollar, Laurie Wideman, Nathaniel T. Berry, Lilly Shanahan, Susan D. Calkins, Susan P. Keane, University of Zurich, and Dollar, Jessica M
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,3317 Demography ,Audiology ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Child Development ,Parasympathetic Nervous System ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Longitudinal Studies ,Vagal tone ,Child ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,media_common ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Age differences ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Growth model ,Self-control ,Adolescent Development ,Child development ,Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,150 Psychology ,Psychology ,10190 Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Parasympathetic nervous system functioning as indexed by respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) is widely used as a measure of physiological regulation. We examined developmental patterns of children's resting RSA and RSA reactivity from 2 to 15 years of age, a period of time that is marked by considerable advances in children's regulatory abilities. Physiological data were collected from a community sample of 270 children (116 males) during a resting period and during a frustration laboratory task when the children were 2, 4, 5, 7, 10, and 15 years old. We examined both stability and continuity in resting RSA and RSA reactivity across time. We found stability in resting RSA but not RSA reactivity from toddlerhood to adolescence. Separate multilevel models were used to examine changes in resting RSA and RSA reactivity from Age 2 to Age 15. The rate of change in resting RSA slowed from Age 2 to Age 15 with a plateau around Age 10. A splined growth model indicated that the rate of RSA reactivity increased from Age 2 to Age 7 and a modest slowing and leveling off from Age 7 to Age 15. Understanding the developmental characteristics of RSA across childhood and adolescence is important to understanding the larger constructs of self- and emotion regulation. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
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7. Maternal socialization of child emotion and adolescent adjustment: Indirect effects through emotion regulation
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Nicole B. Perry, Susan D. Calkins, Lilly Shanahan, Jessica M. Dollar, Susan P. Keane, and University of Zurich
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,3317 Demography ,Poison control ,Developmental Science ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Arousal ,Social Skills ,Child Development ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Early childhood ,Child ,Maternal Behavior ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,media_common ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,Socialization ,05 social sciences ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Self-control ,Adolescent Development ,Mother-Child Relations ,Emotional Regulation ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,Social competence ,150 Psychology ,Psychology ,Social Adjustment ,10190 Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
A fundamental question in developmental science is how parental emotion socialization processes are associated with children's subsequent adaptation. Few extant studies have examined this question across multiple developmental periods and levels of analysis. Here, we tested whether mothers' supportive and nonsupportive reactions to their 5-year-old children's negative emotions were associated with teacher and adolescent self-reported adjustment at age 15 via children's physiological and behavioral emotion regulation at age 10 (N = 404). Results showed that maternal supportive reactions to their children's negative emotions were associated with children's greater emotion regulation in a laboratory task and also a composite of mother and teacher reports of emotion regulation at age 10. Maternal nonsupportive reactions to their children's negative emotions were uncorrelated with supportive reactions, but were associated with poorer child physiological regulation and also poorer mother- and teacher-reported emotion regulation at age 10. In turn, better physiological regulation at age 10 was associated with more adolescent-reported social competence at age 15. Furthermore, teacher and mother reports of emotion regulation at age 10 were associated with increased adolescent adjustment across all domains. Mediational effects from nonsupportive and supportive reactions to adolescent adjustment tested via bootstrapping were significant. Our findings suggest that mothers' reactions to their children's negative emotions in early childhood may play a role in their children's ability to regulate their arousal both physiologically and behaviorally in middle childhood, which in turn may play a role in their ability to manage their emotions and behaviors and to navigate increasingly complex social contexts in adolescence. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
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8. Increasing longevity and life satisfaction: is there a catch to living longer?
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Nemitz, Janina, University of Zurich, and Nemitz, Janina
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Economics and Econometrics ,10007 Department of Economics ,3317 Demography ,2002 Economics and Econometrics ,330 Economics ,Demography - Published
- 2022
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9. Keeping the euro at any cost? Explaining attitudes toward the euro-austerity trade-off in Greece
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Stefanie Walter, Nikitas Konstantinidis, Elias Dinas, Ignacio García Jurado, University of Zurich, and Konstantinidis, Nikitas
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political science and international relations ,demography euro ,3317 Demography ,Trade-off ,survey data ,voter attitudes ,Political science ,Survey data ,320 Political science ,Trade offs ,health (social science) ,Internal devaluation ,survey experiment ,uncertainty ,Demography ,EMU ,Emu ,Greece ,Euro ,Uncertainty ,International economics ,offs ,Austerity ,Eurozone crisis ,Voter attitudes ,3320 Political Science and International Relations ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,3306 Health (social science) ,trade ,Survey experiment - Abstract
First published online: 21 June 2020 Despite years of crisis, the euro has enjoyed strong popular support across the Eurozone periphery. In light of the high costs of internal devaluation strategies, this begs the question why the public has remained in favor of the common currency. In this article, we propose a theoretical mechanism that accounts for both voters' pocketbook preferences and their sociotropic assessments over the noisy trade-offs associated with the outcomes of euro membership and euro exit. Using original survey data from three consecutive survey waves in Greece (conducted in July, September, and December 2015, respectively), we analyze the attitudes of Greek voters toward the euro in an environment of acute uncertainty, austerity, high unemployment, and economic recession. First, we juxtapose our uncertainty mechanism of popular euro attitudes against other explanations put forward in the literature and find strong support for our argument. Second, we conduct a survey experiment to tap into attitudes toward the euro-austerity trade-off and find that as uncertainty over policy outcomes diminishes, framing effects abate in significance, especially among those who voted 'No' in the July 2015 referendum. Finally, we derive distinct sets of euro preferences for different 'vulnerability profiles'. Over time, as the trade-offs of euro membership become more pronounced, we find a marked fall in euro support between July and December 2015.
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- 2022
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10. Equilibrium Unemployment and the Duration of Unemployment Benefits
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Josef Zweimüller, Jan C. van Ours, Rafael Lalive, University of Zurich, Zweimüller, Josef, Research Group: Economics, and Department of Economics
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Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,3317 Demography ,2002 Economics and Econometrics ,330 Economics ,10007 Department of Economics ,Microdata (HTML) ,8. Economic growth ,0502 economics and business ,Unemployment ,Misery index ,Economics ,Unemployment rate ,sense organs ,050207 economics ,Duration (project management) ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,050205 econometrics ,Demography ,Social policy ,media_common - Abstract
This paper uses microdata to evaluate the impact on the steady-state unemployment rate of an increase in maximum benefit duration. We evaluate a policy change in Austria that extended maximum benefit duration and use this policy change to estimate the causal impact of benefit duration on labor market flows. We find that the policy change leads to a significant increase in the steady-state unemployment rate and, surprisingly, most of this increase is due to an increase in the inflow into rather than the outflow from unemployment.
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- 2022
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11. From polarization of the public to polarization of the electorate: European Parliament elections as the preferred race for ideologues
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Michele Fenzl, Jonathan B Slapin, Samuel Wilhelm, University of Zurich, and Slapin, Jonathan B
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Health (social science) ,3320 Political Science and International Relations ,320 Political science ,Political Science and International Relations ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,3317 Demography ,3306 Health (social science) ,Demography - Abstract
This study examines the effect of voters’ ideological extremism on turnout in European national and European Parliament elections. Using data from recent European Election Studies, the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems, and other national election studies, we find that, relative to centrists, ideological extremists (measured by self-placement on the left–right scales) are more likely to vote in European Parliament elections (2014 and 2019) but not national elections. We argue that these differences stem from the fact that European Parliament elections are second-order races. The results help to explain why the European Parliament has become more polarized, even in the absence of significant changes in overall attitudes among the European public, and why extreme parties have been more successful in recent European Parliament than national elections.
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- 2022
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12. Avoidance, ambiguity, alternation: position blurring strategies in multidimensional party competition
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Jelle Koedam, University of Zurich, and Koedam, Jelle
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political science and international relations ,demography ,Health (social science) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,position blurring ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,3317 Demography ,02 engineering and technology ,Political science ,European integration ,320 Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,Alternation (formal language theory) ,Positive economics ,uncertainty ,media_common ,Party competition ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,health(social science) dimensionality ,05 social sciences ,party strategy ,Ambiguity ,0506 political science ,Incentive ,3320 Political Science and International Relations ,Position (finance) ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,3306 Health (social science) ,Demon - Abstract
In a multidimensional environment, parties may have compelling incentives to obscure their preferences on select issues. This study contributes to a growing literature on position blurring by demonstrating how party leaders purposively create uncertainty about where their party stands on the issue of European integration. By doing so, it theoretically and empirically disentangles the cause of position blurring—parties’ strategic behavior—from its intended political outcome. The analysis of survey and manifesto data across 14 Western European countries (1999–2019) confirms that three distinct strategies—avoidance, ambiguity, and alternation—all increase expert uncertainty about a party's position. This finding is then unpacked by examining for whom avoidance is particularly effective. This study has important implications for our understanding of party strategy, democratic representation, and political accountability.
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- 2021
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13. Who shapes migration in open labour markets? Analysing migration infrastructures and brokers of circularly migrating home care workers in Switzerland
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Huey Shy Chau, Karin Schwiter, University of Zurich, and Chau, Huey Shy
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Planning and Development ,Labour economics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Geography ,Geography, Planning and Development ,3317 Demography ,Free movement ,10122 Institute of Geography ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,Care workers ,3312 Sociology and Political Science ,Care work ,Business ,910 Geography & travel ,health care economics and organizations ,Demography - Abstract
Fostered by the free movement of workers agreement in the Schengen area, a new market for live-in care work has emerged. Private for-profit care agencies recruit circular migrant women from Eastern...
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- 2021
14. Economic conditions, group relative deprivation and ethnic threat perceptions
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Bart Meuleman, Thomas F. Pettigrew, Koen Abts, Peter Schmidt, Eldad Davidov, University of Zurich, Meuleman, Bart, and Sociology
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,Population ,0507 social and economic geography ,Ethnic group ,3317 Demography ,European Social Survey (ESS) ,UFSP13-1 Social Networks ,COMPETITION ,medicine.disease_cause ,Structural equation modeling ,10004 Department of Business Administration ,Ethnic threat ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Economic indicator ,050602 political science & public administration ,medicine ,SOCIETIES ,GROUP POSITION ,education ,Relative deprivation ,POLITICS ,POPULATION ,Demography ,media_common ,10095 Institute of Sociology ,RACIAL PREJUDICE ,education.field_of_study ,RACE ,VALUES ,05 social sciences ,group relative deprivation (GRD) ,ANTI-IMMIGRANT ATTITUDES ,0506 political science ,European Social Survey ,330 Economics ,multilevel structural equation modelling (MLSEM) ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Demographic economics ,intergroup contact ,Psychology ,Prejudice ,050703 geography ,EUROPEAN COUNTRIES - Abstract
Explaining negative attitudes towards immigration in general and threat due to immigration, in particular, has been a major topic of study in recent decades. While intergroup contact has received considerable attention in explaining ethnic threat, group relative deprivation (GRD), that is, feelings that one’s group is unfairly deprived of desirable goods in comparison to relevant out-groups, has been largely ignored in cross-national research. Nevertheless, various smaller-scale studies have demonstrated that GRD can have a decisive impact on prejudice. In the current study, we examine the association between GRD and ethnic threat systematically across 20 European countries, thereby controlling for intergroup contact and value priorities. The 7th round of the European Social Survey (ESS) includes questions assessing respondents’ feelings of group deprivation compared to immigrants and offers for the first time an opportunity to contextualise the threat-inducing effect of GRD across Europe. A multilevel structural equation model (MLSEM) demonstrates a considerable association between GRD and ethnic threat both on the individual and country levels. The results indicate that GRD is not only an important mediating factor between social structural positions and perceived threat, but also fully mediates the relation between contextual economic indicators and ethnic threat.
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- 2020
15. EU migrant retention and the temporalities of migrant staying: a new conceptual framework
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Helena Hof, Simon Pemberton, Emilia Pietka-Nykaza, University of Zurich, and Hof, Helena
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Sociology and Political Science ,Migrant staying ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0507 social and economic geography ,3317 Demography ,Social Sciences ,Economic shortage ,Communities. Classes. Races ,Temporal ,Urban groups. The city. Urban sociology ,Temporalities ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,Immigration policy ,3312 Sociology and Political Science ,Order (exchange) ,G1 ,Development economics ,050602 political science & public administration ,Relevance (law) ,1804 Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty ,HT201-221 ,Demography ,Planning and Development ,Assets ,GB ,Geography ,Linked lives ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,Economic sector ,Statistics ,05 social sciences ,HT101-395 ,City population. Including children in cities, immigration ,3308 Law ,0506 political science ,Biographies ,HT51-1595 ,Conceptual framework ,Labour supply ,Anchors ,GF31 ,10106 Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies ,H1 ,Probability and Uncertainty ,Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty ,050703 geography ,Law - Abstract
Challenges of weak economic growth, population decline, and labour shortages led many countries across the world to introduce immigration policy changes in order to attract foreign migrants. This paper focuses on Japan (Tokyo) and the UK (Birmingham, Edinburgh and Glasgow) given common concerns over long term demographic trends and the burgeoning lack of labour supply in particular sectors of the economy through use of foreign labour. The paper shifts the focus from efforts focused on attracting and selecting foreign labour to the retention of such individuals. Drawing on research with EU migrants in Japan and the UK, the paper highlights how staying may occur after a period of mobility, rather than only being of relevance to those who never left their home region. The paper develops a new conceptual framework, which helps to identify different dimensions that shape migrant staying as a temporal process. It is highlighted how staying is shaped incrementally and facilitated or undermined over time in relation to the reciprocal importance of diverse assets, anchors and the changing biographies of migrants and the places in which they live – as well as the relational aspects of migrants’ ‘linked lives’.
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- 2021
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16. Ethnic Majority Attitudes toward Jewish and Non-Jewish Migrants in Israel: The Role of Perceptions of Threat, Collective Vulnerability, and Human Values
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Raijman, Rebeca, Hochman, Oshrat, Davidov, Eldad, University of Zurich, and Raijman, Rebeca
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Planning and Development ,Health (social science) ,Geography ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0507 social and economic geography ,3317 Demography ,UFSP13-1 Social Networks ,0506 political science ,Health(social science) ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,050602 political science & public administration ,3306 Health (social science) ,050703 geography ,10095 Institute of Sociology ,Demography - Published
- 2021
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17. Brothers Increase Women’s Gender Conformity
- Author
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Anne Ardila Brenøe, University of Zurich, Brenøe, Anne Ardila, and Brenoe, Anne Ardila
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demography ,J22 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Occupational choice ,J24 ,Gender conformity ,3317 Demography ,2002 Economics and Econometrics ,Sister ,Conformity ,Danish ,ECON Department of Economics ,10007 Department of Economics ,0502 economics and business ,ddc:330 ,Gender norms ,J31 ,050207 economics ,Economics and econometrics ,media_common ,Social policy ,J16 ,050208 finance ,J12 ,05 social sciences ,motherhood ,J13 ,Motherhood ,gender norms ,gender conformity ,Brother ,language.human_language ,330 Economics ,occupational choice ,Sibling sex ,language ,Demographic economics ,Psychology ,sibling sex ,Mechanism (sociology) - Abstract
I examine how one central aspect of the family environment—sibling sex composition—affects women’s gender conformity. Using Danish administrative data, I causally estimate the effect of having a second-born brother relative to a sister for first-born women. I show that women with a brother acquire more traditional gender roles as measured through their choice of occupation and partner. This results in a stronger response to motherhood in labor market outcomes. As a relevant mechanism, I provide evidence of increased gender-specialized parenting in families with mixed-sex children. Finally, I find persistent effects on the next generation of girls.
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- 2021
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18. Economic integration of first‐ and second‐generation immigrants in the Swiss labour market: Does the reason for immigration make a difference?
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Maskileyson, Dina, Semyonov, Moshe, Davidov, Eldad, University of Zurich, and Maskileyson, Dina
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Planning and Development ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,Geography ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,economic integration ,3317 Demography ,UFSP13-1 Social Networks ,Switzerland ,10095 Institute of Sociology ,Demography ,immigration ,income inequality ,reason for immigration - Published
- 2021
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19. The making of a Swiss migration regime: electronic data infrastructures and statistics in the Federal Administration, 1960s–1990s
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Espahangizi, Kijan, Mähr, Moritz, and University of Zurich
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demography ,data infrastructures ,3317 Demography ,public administration ,population movements ,10109 Institute of History ,3316 Cultural Studies ,data ,3312 Sociology and Political Science ,statistics ,3314 Anthropology ,migration regime ,driven policies ,900 History ,Switzerland ,1202 History - Published
- 2020
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20. Opting out for Getting in: Existential Mobility in European Graduates’ Migration to Asia
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Helena Hof, University of Zurich, and Hof, Helena
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Planning and Development ,Health (social science) ,White (horse) ,Opting out ,Geography ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,Qualitative interviews ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0507 social and economic geography ,3317 Demography ,Gender studies ,Existentialism ,0506 political science ,Emigration ,Health(social science) ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,360 Social problems & social services ,050602 political science & public administration ,10106 Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies ,3306 Health (social science) ,050703 geography ,Demography - Abstract
This article examines young Europeans’ emigration from Europe. Qualitative interviews with mostly white Europeans in Singapore and Tokyo reveal how these young migrants’ motility, or “potential to ...
- Published
- 2020
21. What factors explain anti-Muslim prejudice? An assessment of the effects of Muslim population size, institutional characteristics and immigration-related media claims
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Elmar Schlueter, Anu Masso, Eldad Davidov, University of Zurich, and Schlueter, Elmar
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group threat theory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Immigration ,0507 social and economic geography ,3317 Demography ,European Social Survey (ESS) ,UFSP13-1 Social Networks ,Criminology ,10004 Department of Business Administration ,Muslim population ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,050602 political science & public administration ,Sociology ,Muslim prejudice ,state support of religion ,Prejudice (legal term) ,10095 Institute of Sociology ,Demography ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,humanities ,330 Economics ,0506 political science ,immigrant integration policies (MIPEX) ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Anti ,050703 geography - Abstract
What factors explain majority members’ anti-Muslim prejudice? This is an increasingly important question to ask, but to date only relatively few studies have sought to provide answers from a cross-...
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- 2019
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22. Direct and indirect predictors of opposition to immigration in Europe: individual values, cultural values, and symbolic threat
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Davidov, Eldad, Seddig, Daniel, Gorodzeisky, Anastasia, Raijman, Rebeca, Schmidt, Peter, Semyonov, Moshe, University of Zurich, and Davidov, Eldad
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10004 Department of Business Administration ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,3317 Demography ,UFSP13-1 Social Networks ,330 Economics ,10095 Institute of Sociology - Published
- 2020
23. When 'global talents' struggle to become local workers: The new face of skilled migration to corporate Japan
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Yen-Fen Tseng, Helena Hof, University of Zurich, and Hof, Helena
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Planning and Development ,Economic growth ,Geography ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0507 social and economic geography ,3317 Demography ,Face (sociological concept) ,050701 cultural studies ,0506 political science ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,Perception ,10106 Institute of Asian and Oriental Studies ,050602 political science & public administration ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
Although more Japanese companies are recruiting foreign employees, few studies have paid attention to foreign workers’ struggles in the workplace and their perceptions of their career over the long term. This study qualitatively explores the experiences of Asian and European locally hired white-collar employees in Japanese firms. It finds that although their numbers are rising, foreigners struggle with Japanese firms’ expectations for foreigners to assimilate regardless of nationality or ethnicity. Overall, firms focus on the assimilation of foreign employees. Thus, while the migrants are hired as “global talents,” Japanese firms expect them to act like local workers.
- Published
- 2020
24. The impact of labor market entry conditions on initial job assignment and wages
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Andreas Kuhn, Beatrice Brunner, University of Zurich, and Kuhn, Andreas
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Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Wage ,3317 Demography ,Endogenous labor market entry ,2002 Economics and Econometrics ,Job assignment ,Initial job assignment ,142-005 142-005 ,Efficiency wage ,331: Arbeitsökonomie ,Economics ,Unemployment rate ,Quality (business) ,Initial labor market condition ,health care economics and organizations ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
Erworben im Rahmen der Schweizer Nationallizenzen (http://www.nationallizenzen.ch), We estimate the effects of labor market entry conditions on wages for male individuals first entering the Austrian labor market between 1978 and 2000. We find a large negative effect of unfavorable entry conditions on starting wages and a sizable negative long-run effect. Our preferred estimates imply a decrease in starting wages by about 0.9 % and a lifetime loss in wages of about 1.3 % for an increase in the initial local unemployment rate by one percentage point. We show that poor entry conditions are associated with lower quality of a worker’s first employer and that the quality of workers’ first employer explains as much as three-quarters of the observed long-run wage effects resulting from poor entry conditions. Moreover, wage effects are much more persistent for blue-collar workers because some of them appear to be permanently locked in into low-paying jobs/tasks.
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- 2019
25. Political and institutional determinants of immigration policies
- Author
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Tarik Abou-Chadi, University of Zurich, and Abou-Chadi, Tarik
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media_common.quotation_subject ,Veto ,Immigration ,Population ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,3317 Demography ,Context (language use) ,02 engineering and technology ,Public opinion ,Competition (economics) ,Politics ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Immigration policy ,Political science ,320 Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,electoral competition ,education ,Demography ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,political institutions ,05 social sciences ,0506 political science ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Political economy ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,business ,immigration - Abstract
This paper investigates how the interplay of parties' preferences, political institutions and electoral competition affects the liberalisation of immigration policies. It joins a growing body of research that focuses on the role of domestic factors in shaping immigration policies. While several studies point to the important role of partisanship and the activation of public opinion, they fail to provide a clear mechanism that takes into account differences in parties' preferences as well as the institutional context they act in. By adding two crucial factors to the analysis, this paper presents a new framework for liberal change in the field of immigration politics. First, institutional veto points determine if left-of-centre parties can reform policies according to their preferences. Second, the degree of electoral competition and the politicisation of immigration issues affect how susceptible political parties are to the anti-immigrant sentiment in the population. A time-series cross-section ana...
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- 2016
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26. Searching for therapies, seeking for hope: transnational cancer care in Asia
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Heidi Kaspar, University of Zurich, and Kaspar, Heidi
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Planning and Development ,10122 Institute of Geography ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,Geography ,Sociology and Political Science ,3312 Sociology and Political Science ,3317 Demography ,910 Geography & travel ,Demography - Published
- 2019
27. Analyzing inter-state negotiations in the Eurozone crisis and beyond
- Author
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Stefanie Walter, Jeffry Frieden, University of Zurich, and Walter, Stefanie
- Subjects
political science and international relations ,demography ,eurozone crisis ,Health (social science) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,3317 Demography ,ideal points ,02 engineering and technology ,State (polity) ,Political science ,320 Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European union ,bargaining power ,international negotiations ,media_common ,021110 strategic, defence & security studies ,health(social science) ,Member states ,05 social sciences ,bargaining ,0506 political science ,Negotiation ,Bargaining power ,3320 Political Science and International Relations ,Political economy ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,3306 Health (social science) ,European debt crisis - Abstract
Analyzing international negotiations among the member states of the European Union raises a number of analytical issues, especially in unusual circumstances such as the Eurozone crisis. Our article discusses these issues in the light of existing theory and informed by the empirical analyses assembled in this special issue. ‘National preferences’ or ideal points of the governments involved are driven by their domestic socio-economic and political conditions and institutions, the dimensionality of the negotiations, and strategic considerations. We then discuss how national preferences, states’ bargaining power, the strategic and institutional bargaining context, and the bargaining dynamics jointly influence the bargaining outcome. Examples from European negotiations in the context of the Eurozone crisis illustrate both the complexity of the process and the value of serious, theoretically informed, empirical analysis.
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- 2019
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28. ‘We were forgotten’: explaining ethnic voting in Bolivia’s highlands and lowlands
- Author
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Aline-Sophia Hirseland, Oliver Strijbis, University of Zurich, and Hirseland, Aline-Sophia
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Wahlforschung ,demography ,Latin Americans ,analysis ,empirical social research ,Ethnic group ,3317 Demography ,Verhalten ,arts and humanities (miscellaneous) ,Wahlverhalten ,Voting ,050602 political science & public administration ,0601 history and archaeology ,Political science ,identity ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,06 humanities and the arts ,indigene Völker ,0506 political science ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,Bolivia ,Politikwissenschaft ,media_common.quotation_subject ,election ,Wahl ,Indigenous ,Power (social and political) ,Bolivien ,320 Political science ,Ethnische Faktoren ,Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture ,Abstimmung ,empirische Sozialforschung ,indigenous peoples ,politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur ,060101 anthropology ,behavior ,minority ,voting behavior ,party voter linkages ,Identität ,Analyse ,ethnic voting ,election research ,Socialism ,Minderheit ,voting ,Political economy ,ddc:320 - Abstract
With the election of Evo Morales and his party Movement to Socialism (MAS) in 2005, Bolivia has become the only country in Latin America to have an indigenous party in power. However, it is misleading to take the MAS government as representing all of Bolivia's ethnic diversity. Its indigenous population can be classified into peoples from the Andean highlands and from the Amazonian lowlands. Research has treated the indigenous population as uniform or focused on the Andean peoples and on parties rather than voters. This paper aims to differentiate this picture by showing that variances between highland and lowland indigenous peoples started with the appearance of Homeland's Consciousness (CONDEPA) and have increased since MAS came to power. While the highland indigenous peoples have preferred left political parties, parties with pro-indigenous agendas or which used indigenous symbolism, the lowland peoples have tended to support centre-right parties. The paper attempts to explain these differences in the voting behaviour of Bolivia's indigenous peoples. Ethnic voting is analysed in the time span from 1985 until 2014 within a mixed-methods design.
- Published
- 2019
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29. Out of balance? Positivity-negativity ratios in couples' interaction impact child adjustment
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Zemp, Martina, Johnson, Matthew D, Bodenmann, Guy, University of Zurich, and Zemp, Martina
- Subjects
3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,3317 Demography ,150 Psychology - Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
30. Speed, timing and duration: contested temporalities, techno-political controversies and the emergence of the EU’s smart border
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Simon Sontowski, University of Zurich, and Sontowski, Simon
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05 social sciences ,0507 social and economic geography ,3317 Demography ,Temporality ,Filter (software) ,0506 political science ,Temporalities ,Politics ,10122 Institute of Geography ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Order (exchange) ,Political economy ,Political science ,Law ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,050602 political science & public administration ,InformationSystems_MISCELLANEOUS ,Duration (project management) ,910 Geography & travel ,050703 geography ,Demography - Abstract
Practices of border control increasingly rely on digital biometrics in order to sort and filter cross-border movements. But while its effects are well examined in migration and border studies, less...
- Published
- 2018
31. Childhood Self-regulation as a Mechanism Through Which Early Overcontrolling Parenting is Associated with Adjustment in Preadolescence
- Author
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Susan P. Keane, Nicole B. Perry, Lilly Shanahan, Jessica M. Dollar, Susan D. Calkins, University of Zurich, and Perry, Nicole B
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Male ,course Studies ,3317 Demography ,Child Behavior ,050105 experimental psychology ,Article ,Developmental psychology ,Self-Control ,span and Life ,Social Skills ,Executive Function ,Life ,Social skills ,Inhibitory control ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Early childhood ,Longitudinal Studies ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Path analysis (statistics) ,Child ,Demography ,Emotional Intelligence ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Self-management ,Preadolescence ,Academic Success ,Child rearing ,Parenting ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,Emotional intelligence ,05 social sciences ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Inhibition, Psychological ,Child, Preschool ,Female ,150 Psychology ,Psychology ,Social Adjustment ,10190 Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
We examined longitudinal associations across an 8-year time span between overcontrolling parenting during toddlerhood, self-regulation during early childhood, and social, emotional, and academic adjustment in preadolescence (N = 422). Overcontrolling parenting, emotion regulation (ER), and inhibitory control (IC) were observed in the laboratory; preadolescent adjustment was teacher-reported and child self-reported. Results from path analysis indicated that overcontrolling parenting at age 2 was associated negatively with ER and IC at age 5, which, in turn, were associated with more child-reported emotional and school problems, fewer teacher-reported social skills, and less teacher-reported academic productivity at age 10. These effects held even when controlling for prior levels of adjustment at age 5, suggesting that ER and IC in early childhood may be associated with increases and decreases in social, emotional, and academic functioning from childhood to preadolescence. Finally, indirect effects from overcontrolling parenting at age 2 to preadolescent outcomes at age 10 were significant, both through IC and ER at age 5. These results support the notion that parenting during toddlerhood is associated with child adjustment into adolescence through its relation with early developing self-regulatory skills. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2018
32. Birth order and health of newborns
- Author
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Brenøe, Anne Ardila, Molitor, Ramona, University of Zurich, and Brenøe, Anne Ardila
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fetal health ,10007 Department of Economics ,prenatal investments ,Birth order ,child health ,3317 Demography ,2002 Economics and Econometrics ,health at birth ,330 Economics - Published
- 2018
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33. Feeling loved and integrated or lonely and rejected in everyday life: The role of age and social motivation
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Nikitin, Jana, Freund, Alexandra M, University of Zurich, and Nikitin, Jana
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Adult ,Male ,Aging ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,3317 Demography ,UFSP13-4 Dynamics of Healthy Aging ,050109 social psychology ,Interpersonal communication ,Social identity approach ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Social integration ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Interpersonal Relations ,Social isolation ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Everyday life ,Social Behavior ,Demography ,media_common ,Aged ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Motivation ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,Adult development ,Loneliness ,05 social sciences ,Social Support ,Middle Aged ,Love ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Feeling ,Well-being ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,150 Psychology ,Psychology ,Goals - Abstract
Social approach and social avoidance goals (i.e., approach of positive and avoidance of negative outcomes in social situations) are important predictors of the feeling of being socially integrated or isolated. However, little is known about the development of these goals across adulthood. In a large diary study with N = 744 young (18-39 years), middle-aged (40-59 years), and older adults (60-83 years), we tested the hypothesis that the adaptiveness of social goals changes across adulthood: Social approach goals were hypothesized to be adaptive during young adulthood when adult social relationships are to be established. In contrast, social avoidance goals were hypothesized to become more adaptive with age as people are increasingly motivated to avoid interpersonal tension. Our findings support these hypotheses: Social approach goals were positively and social avoidance goals negatively associated with younger but not with middle-aged and older adults' daily social well-being. These results were robust across different situations (positive, negative) and different types of relationships (close, peripheral). The study highlights the changing role of social approach and avoidance goals for daily social well-being across adulthood. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2018
34. The Impact of Modernization and Labor Market Conditions on the School-to-Work Transition in Switzerland: A Dynamic Analysis of the Period from 1946 to 2002
- Author
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David Glauser, Christoph Zangger, Rolf Becker, University of Zurich, Tillmann, Robin, Voorpostel, Marieke, Farago, Peter, and Zangger, Christoph
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to ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,analysis ,business.industry ,school ,3317 Demography ,Distribution (economics) ,Modernization theory ,apc ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,work ,Quartile ,Order (exchange) ,Cohort ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,labor market ,business ,School-to-work transition ,Period (music) ,10095 Institute of Sociology ,modernization ,Market conditions - Abstract
The transition from the education system into the labor market is a significant and sensitive phase in the life course of young generations given the long-term consequences of work history and impact on future opportunities (Blossfeld 1985, 1987; DiPrete et al. 2001). It is undisputed that the school-to-work transition depends on individual resources, such as social background and attained educational qualification (Buchmann and Sacchi 1998; Jann and Combet 2012; R. Becker and Zangger 2013) and on the structure and organization of the education and the employment system as well as their institutional linkage (Allmendinger 1989; Kerckhoff 1995; Shavit and Müller 2000; Wolbers 2007). In addition, opportunities to attain specific educational credentials and returns to investments in education at the beginning of the occupational career vary over time (e.g., Blau and Duncan 1967). They affect the patterns of labor market entry and the status attainment in the course of people’s occupational career, and indicate the openness of the class structure across birth cohorts (Blossfeld 1987; Sørensen 1986; Shavit and Müller 1998). However, this time dependency of these trajectories has often been neglected in previous empirical research. Therefore, there is limited information on the probability and process through which individuals accept profitable employment and the social status they achieve when they enter the labor market. In addition, it is important to understand how these factors are related to (1) the long-term social changes with respect to modernization (e.g., educational expansion, tertiarization of professions and industries, and increasing social welfare), (2) the economic business cycles in the post-war period (e.g., boom periods, recessions resulting from oil price shocks, dot- com and real estate bubbles, financial and bank crises), and (3) the fluctuating state of the labor market (e.g., decrease in full time employment, increasing youth unemployment). In this chapter, the transition of different birth cohorts into the labor market is reconstructed as a dynamic process that is time-dependent on the (a) transition duration from the education system to the first job (age or life-cycle effect), (b) period-specific changes of labor market conditions, the level of modernity in the economy, and the social structure after completing education (period effect), and (c) the economic and social conditions at the time of achieving educational qualifications (cohort effect). The age-period-cohort (APC) analysis aims to answer the following questions with respect to Switzerland in the period from 1946 to 2002: (1) What is the role of the modernization trend and economic business cycles in determining the speed of transition and the likelihood of attaining a prestigious job? (2) Are there still direct effects of social background and educational qualification across cohorts on the likelihood of graduates starting their career and achieving status in their first jobs if the modernization trend and economic business cycle are taken into account? (3) Despite the increasing uncertainty due to globalization and labor market competition, are the institutional arrangements of the education system and its linkage to the labor markets effective in providing “safety roads” for young professionals to start their career? The remainder of this contribution is organized as follows. In the next section, the theoretical background is briefly outlined. Subsequently, the data, operationalization of the variables, methodological design, and statistical procedure are presented. The empirical results are discussed in the fourth section and the findings are summarized in the final concluding section.
- Published
- 2018
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35. Working in unison : political parties and policy issue transfer in the multi-level space
- Author
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Senninger, Roman, Bischof, Daniel, University of Zurich, and Senninger, Roman
- Subjects
3320 Political Science and International Relations ,320 Political science ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,3317 Demography ,3306 Health (social science) - Published
- 2018
36. Evolution of fixed demographic heterogeneity from a game of stable coexistence
- Author
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Stefano Giaimo, Annette Baudisch, Arne Traulsen, Xiang-Yi Li, University of Zurich, and Giaimo, Stefano
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,game theory ,Population ,3317 Demography ,Overlapping generations model ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,evolution ,education ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,Demography ,education.field_of_study ,aging ,matrix population models ,030104 developmental biology ,lcsh:HB848-3697 ,Evolutionary biology ,demographic heterogeneity ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,590 Animals (Zoology) ,lcsh:Demography. Population. Vital events ,Evolutionary ecology ,Vital rates ,Game theory ,Matrix population models ,Realization (probability) - Abstract
Background: Demographic heterogeneity refers to the observation that - within the same population - trajectories of survival and reproduction differ substantially between individuals. These differences have been found in both natural and captive populations. Models in ecology and evolution that incorporate demographic heterogeneity can improve both our understanding of the evolution of mortality curves and our population management abilities. Current explanations of the origin of demographic heterogeneity mostly revolve around interindividual differences that are either present at birth (fixed heterogeneity) or the result of stochasticity in life history realization (dynamic heterogeneity). Largely neglected remains the possibility that a form of fixed heterogeneity may evolve from interactions between behaviorally distinct individuals through their lifespan. Objective: We suggest one possible way in which heterogeneity in vital rates may evolve. Our approach assumes game theoretic interactions in the population. Methods: We combine population matrix models and game theory. We study a stable coexistence game between two types that are initially demographically homogeneous and analyze theeffect of mutations that influence the trajectories of survival and reproduction. Results: The rise and fixation of mutations can make the population demographically heterogeneous, while the game can preserve the coexistence of different types in the population. Conclusions: Frequency-dependent selection can help to explain the evolution of demographic heterogeneity. Contribution: Frequency-dependent selection can maintain already existing demographic heterogeneity in a population without overlapping generations. Here, we show that this form of selection can also be involved in the origin of a form of fixed heterogeneity.
- Published
- 2018
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37. Testing the vulnerability and scar models of self-esteem and depressive symptoms from adolescence to middle adulthood and across generations
- Author
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Mathias Allemand, Andrea E. Steiger, Helmut A. Fend, and University of Zurich
- Subjects
Male ,Adolescent ,Personality Inventory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Self-concept ,Scars ,3317 Demography ,Models, Psychological ,Vulnerable Populations ,Developmental psychology ,Germany ,10091 Institute of Education ,DoktoratPSYCH Erstautor ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Parent-Child Relations ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Depressive symptoms ,At-risk students ,Demography ,media_common ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Depression ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,Adult development ,Self-esteem ,Middle Aged ,Self Concept ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Middle adulthood ,Intergenerational Relations ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Personality Assessment Inventory ,Psychology ,150 Psychology - Abstract
The vulnerability model states that low self-esteem functions as a predictor for the development of depressive symptoms whereas the scar model assumes that these symptoms leave scars in individuals resulting in lower self-esteem. Both models have received empirical support, however, they have only been tested within individuals and not across generations (i.e., between family members). Thus, we tested the scope of these competing models by (a) investigating whether the effects hold from adolescence to middle adulthood (long-term vulnerability and scar effects), (b) whether the effects hold across generations (intergenerational vulnerability and scar effects), and (c) whether intergenerational effects are mediated by parental self-esteem and depressive symptoms and parent-child discord. We used longitudinal data from adolescence to middle adulthood (N = 1,359) and from Generation 1 adolescents (G1) to Generation 2 adolescents (G2) (N = 572 parent-child pairs). Results from latent cross-lagged regression analyses demonstrated that both adolescent self-esteem and depressive symptoms were prospectively related to adult self-esteem and depressive symptoms 3 decades later. That is, both the vulnerability and scar models are valid over decades with stronger effects for the vulnerability model. Across generations, we found a substantial direct transmission effect from G1 to G2 adolescent depressive symptoms but no evidence for the proposed intergenerational vulnerability and scar effect or for any of the proposed mediating mechanisms.
- Published
- 2015
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38. Saccadic reaction times in infants and adults: Spatiotemporal factors, gender, and interlaboratory variation
- Author
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Annette Sundqvist, Ida Tidemann, Linda Forssman, Mikael Heimann, Felix-Sebastian Koch, Gustaf Gredebäck, Ben Kenward, Carin Marciszko, Julia Brehm, Tone Kristine Hermansen, University of Zurich, and Kenward, Ben
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Aging ,Visual perception ,Spatial ability ,3317 Demography ,Psychology, Child ,Horizontal saccades ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Reaction Time ,Saccades ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Statistical analysis ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,Sex Characteristics ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Models, Statistical ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Eye movement ,Infant ,Reproducibility of Results ,Saccadic masking ,Confidence interval ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Saccade ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,150 Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Saccade latency is widely used across infant psychology to investigate infants' understanding of events. Interpreting particular latency values requires knowledge of standard saccadic RTs, but there is no consensus as to typical values. This study provides standard estimates of infants' (n = 194, ages 9 to 15 months) saccadic RTs under a range of different spatiotemporal conditions. To investigate the reliability of such standard estimates, data is collected at 4 laboratories in 3 countries. Results indicate that reactions to the appearance of a new object are much faster than reactions to the deflection of a currently fixated moving object; upward saccades are slower than downward or horizontal saccades; reactions to more peripheral stimuli are much slower; and this slowdown is greater for boys than girls. There was little decrease in saccadic RTs between 9 and 15 months, indicating that the period of slow development which is protracted into adolescence begins in late infancy. Except for appearance and deflection differences, infant effects were weak or absent in adults (n = 40). Latency estimates and spatiotemporal effects on latency were generally consistent across laboratories, but a number of lab differences in factors such as individual variation were found. Some but not all differences were attributed to minor procedural differences, highlighting the importance of replication. Confidence intervals (95%) for infants' median reaction latencies for appearance stimuli were 242 to 250 ms and for deflection stimuli 350 to 367 ms. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2017
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39. Better the devil you know? Risk-taking, globalization and populism in Great Britain
- Author
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Tomasz Siczek, Marco R. Steenbergen, University of Zurich, and Steenbergen, Marco R
- Subjects
Health (social science) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Appeal ,3317 Demography ,050109 social psychology ,Context (language use) ,Globalization ,Political science ,Development economics ,320 Political science ,050602 political science & public administration ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,European union ,Demography ,media_common ,risk ,05 social sciences ,Independence ,populism ,0506 political science ,Populism ,Brexit ,3320 Political Science and International Relations ,Political economy ,Political Science and International Relations ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,Immigration law ,3306 Health (social science) ,globalization ,UKIP - Abstract
Right-wing populist parties in European democracies appeal to citizens’ feelings of uncertainty related to globalization by promoting tough immigration laws and curbing the power of the European Union. This article adds to our understanding of how individuals’ risk propensity relates to support for right-wing populist parties and their ideas in the context of globalization. In particular, by drawing on survey data from the United Kingdom we investigate how this personality trait relates to support for the United Kingdom Independence Party and the vote for a British exit from the European Union. The article explores the complex interplay between risk propensity and right-wing populist appeals by dissecting the direct, indirect and total effects of this trait.
- Published
- 2017
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40. Union Citizenship Revisited: Multilateral Democracy as Normative Standard for European Citizenship
- Author
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Rebecca Welge, Antoinette Scherz, University of Zurich, and Welge, Rebecca
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Presumption ,Integration ,3317 Demography ,Transnational ,Democracy ,Equality ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Sovereignty ,Political system ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Law ,Political science ,320 Political science ,10113 Institute of Political Science ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Normative ,European union ,EU ,Citizenship ,Legitimacy ,Demography ,media_common ,Law and economics - Abstract
Union Citizenship as currently implemented in the European Union introduces a distinct concept of citizenship that necessitates an adequate normative approach. The objective of this paper is to assess EU Citizenship against the theoretical background of multilateral democracy. This approach is specifically suited for this task, as it does not rely on a nation-state paradigm or the presumption of a further transformation into a federation or union. We propose three criteria by which to assess multilevel citizenship: equal individual rights, equal sovereignty of peoples and the balancing of individuals' and peoples' interests. We argue that the current practice of Union Citizenship does not fully meet the proposed standards, regarding equal rights within and equal access to, the political system. Based on our assessment, we propose reform options of access to national and supranational citizenship and argue for supranational participation rights and equal transnational rights to gradually re-establish full ...
- Published
- 2014
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41. Flirting in the field: Shifting positionalities and power relations in innocuous sexualisations of research encounters
- Author
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Sara Landolt, Heidi Kaspar, University of Zurich, and Kaspar, Heidi
- Subjects
Cultural Studies ,media_common.quotation_subject ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,0507 social and economic geography ,Subject (philosophy) ,3317 Demography ,Human sexuality ,02 engineering and technology ,Gender Studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Reflexivity ,Sociology ,910 Geography & travel ,Set (psychology) ,Relation (history of concept) ,Demography ,media_common ,Constitution ,Field (Bourdieu) ,05 social sciences ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Gender studies ,16. Peace & justice ,3316 Cultural Studies ,3318 Gender Studies ,10122 Institute of Geography ,1201 Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Flirting ,050703 geography - Abstract
In the last few decades an engaged and sophisticated discussion about the production of data and power relations has developed within feminist methodology. Positionality i.e. the set of relations constituting informants' and researchers' subject positions has been widely used as an analytical tool to account for the complicated ways in which data are co constructed in fieldwork. Based on our own experience of fieldwork conducted in the city of Zurich however we argue that sexuality is underrepresented in this debate. First reflexive writing on fieldwork has been reluctant to consider sexuality as a category in the same way for instance as gender or race. Second even apparently innocuous sexualisations have a considerable effect on the constitution of data and are therefore worth including in the analysis. In this article we examine how flirtation as a part of the participant–researcher relation has re shaped the research encounters in our respective research projects. We discuss the complex navigations between conflicting rationales that it entailed for us as researchers depict the minor and major shifts in positionalities that emerge from the flirtation and examine the reasons why we sometimes embraced flirtation and sometimes rejected it. The objective of the article is to further enrich feminist methodological writing and to suggest to the reader the potential for including various shades of sexual performances such as apparently harmless flirtation into our reflections on data collection.
- Published
- 2014
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42. Labour Market Prospects of Swiss Career Entrants after Completion of Vocational Education and Training
- Author
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Stefan Sacchi, Alexander Salvisberg, University of Zurich, and Salvisberg, A
- Subjects
Further education ,Labour economics ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Structural shift ,3317 Demography ,Training (civil) ,Work experience ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,Vocational education ,Unemployment ,Economics ,New entrants ,Disadvantage ,10095 Institute of Sociology ,Demography ,media_common - Abstract
This study seeks to find the reasons for the rising risk of unemployment for people who have completed basic vocational education and training (VET) in Switzerland. We focus on the long-term structural shift on the demand side of the labour market and its consequences for new entrants' chances of employment in the labour force. A detailed analysis of the development of vacancies for such ‘career entrants' in the time period 2001 to 2011 suggests that neither a growing occupational mismatch nor a general shift in the level of education to the disadvantage of workers with vocational education can be made responsible for the rising unemployment of labour market entrants. Instead, the available evidence indicates that a diminishing part of the vacancies suited for VET graduates remains open to entrants because of the increasing job requirements with regard to work experience and further education. Basic vocational education and training alone is increasingly less a guarantee for a smooth entry into th...
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
43. The co-development of sympathy and overt aggression from middle childhood to early adolescence
- Author
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Zuffianò, A, Colasante, T, Buchmann, M, Malti, T, University of Zurich, and Zuffianò, A
- Subjects
3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,3317 Demography ,370 Education ,10190 Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development - Published
- 2017
44. Age and gender differences in motivational manifestations of the Big Five from age 16 to 60
- Author
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Mathias Allemand, Regula Lehmann, Lars Penke, Jaap J. A. Denissen, University of Zurich, Lehmann, Regula, and Developmental Psychology
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Agreeableness ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Consciousness ,Personality Inventory ,media_common.quotation_subject ,3317 Demography ,Big Five personality traits and culture ,Online Systems ,Hierarchical structure of the Big Five ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Personality ,Big Five personality traits ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,media_common ,Motivation ,Sex Characteristics ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Extraversion and introversion ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,Alternative five model of personality ,Conscientiousness ,Middle Aged ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Personality Development ,Female ,150 Psychology ,Psychology - Abstract
The present cross-sectional study investigated age and gender differences in motivational manifestations of the Big Five in a large German-speaking Internet sample (N = 19,022). Participants ranging in age from 16 to 60 years completed the Five Individual Reaction Norms Inventory (FIRNI; Denissen & Penke, 2008a), and two traditional Big Five measures. Age differences were found suggesting that mean levels of neuroticism and extraversion are negatively associated with age, whereas agreeableness and conscientiousness are positively associated. Openness to experience demonstrated a curvilinear association with age, with the highest mean levels in midlife. Gender differences were found suggesting that women, on average, have higher levels of neuroticism, extraversion, and agreeableness, while men are more open to experience. Neither the main effect of gender nor Age × Gender interactions were significant in the case of conscientiousness. In comparison to the 2 traditional Big Five measures, age differences in the motivational manifestations of the Big Five as assessed by the FIRNI were more pronounced, which might be explained by the greater developmental plasticity of flexible motivational processes or the intraindividual phrasing of the items of the FIRNI, compared to the kinds of behavioral descriptions that are emphasized in traditional Big Five items. The further study of such motivational processes might contribute to a better understanding of personality development.
- Published
- 2013
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45. Europeanisation without the European Union? The Case of Bi-National Marriages in Switzerland
- Author
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Schroedter, Julia H, Rössel, Jörg, University of Zurich, and Schroedter, Julia H
- Subjects
Europe ,3305 Geography, Planning and Development ,Europeanisation ,300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology ,bi ,3317 Demography ,national marriages ,Switzerland ,10095 Institute of Sociology - Abstract
We study the formation of bi national marital unions among partners from Switzerland and the European Union (EU) 15 countries as one indicator of the Europeanisation of Swiss Society. The result of our empirical analysis shows that there is in fact no clear increase of such bi national marriages over time. However there are two structural conditions fostering EU15 marriages. One is that Swiss living close to the country’s border have a higher propensity to marry a person from across that border compared with other Swiss. The other is that the greater the size of the foreign population in a Swiss canton including a larger number of EU15 nationals the more likely is a Swiss to have a spouse from an EU15 country. These results suggest the conclusion that a rise in EU15 marriages is still to come as the number of foreigners from these countries is increasing and also border regions become more important because of a continuing rise of commuters from neighbouring countries.
- Published
- 2013
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46. The USSR Section of the International Red Aid (MOPR) : The Institutionalisation of International Solidarity in Interwar Soviet Society
- Author
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Gleb J Albert, University of Zurich, Weiss, Holger, and Albert, Gleb J
- Subjects
Institutionalisation ,3312 Sociology and Political Science ,Political science ,Political economy ,Section (typography) ,3317 Demography ,Economic system ,10109 Institute of History ,3316 Cultural Studies ,Solidarity ,900 History ,1202 History - Published
- 2016
47. The end is (not) near: Aging, essentialism, and future time perspective
- Author
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David Weiss, Maya Mathias, Alexandra M. Freund, Veronika Job, Stephanie Grah, University of Zurich, and Weiss, David
- Subjects
Time perspective ,Adult ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Essentialism ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Culture ,3317 Demography ,050109 social psychology ,Context (language use) ,UFSP13-4 Dynamics of Healthy Aging ,Affect (psychology) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Cohort Studies ,Young Adult ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,media_common ,Aged ,Psychological Tests ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Mechanism (biology) ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Gender studies ,Chronological age ,Time perception ,Middle Aged ,humanities ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Social Perception ,Time Perception ,Regression Analysis ,Psychology ,150 Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
Beliefs about aging influence how we interpret and respond to changes within and around us. Essentialist beliefs about aging are defined as views that link chronological age with inherent and immutable properties underlying aging-related changes. These beliefs may influence the experience of aging-related changes and shape people's outlook of the future. We hypothesized that people who endorse essentialist beliefs about aging report a more limited future time perspective. Two studies provided correlational (Study 1, N = 250; 18-77 years) and experimental (Study 2, N = 103; 20-77 years) evidence that essentialist beliefs about aging affect people's future time perspective. In addition, Study 2 and Study 3 (N = 174; 34-67 years) tested the underlying mechanism and provided evidence that perception of aging-related threat explains the effect of essentialist beliefs on a reduced future time perspective. These findings highlight the fundamental role of essentialist beliefs about aging for the perception of time horizons in the context of aging. (PsycINFO Database Record
- Published
- 2016
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48. Mastering Developmental Transitions in Young and Middle Adulthood: The Interplay of Openness to Experience and Traditional Gender Ideology on Women's Self-Efficacy and Subjective Well-Being
- Author
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Alexandra M. Freund, David Weiss, Bettina S. Wiese, University of Zurich, and Weiss, David
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Adult ,Employment ,Coping (psychology) ,Adolescent ,Human Development ,Self-concept ,Individuality ,3317 Demography ,050109 social psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Life Change Events ,Young Adult ,0502 economics and business ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Openness to experience ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Women ,Longitudinal Studies ,Subjective well-being ,Gender role ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,Adult development ,05 social sciences ,Uncertainty ,Gender Identity ,Self Concept ,Self Efficacy ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Well-being ,Parental leave ,Female ,150 Psychology ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management ,Switzerland - Abstract
The present research focuses on 2 factors that might help or hurt women to cope with the uncertainties associated with developmental transitions in modern societies (i.e., starting one's first job, graduating from high school, reentry to work after parental leave). We investigate (a) the role of openness to experience in coping with challenging transitions and (b) the (mal)adaptive consequences of adopting a traditional gender ideology. Starting with the assumption that transitional uncertainty has different consequences for women high or low in openness to experience, a first experiment (N = 61; 18-30 years) demonstrated that self-efficacy and well-being decrease after being confronted with transitional uncertainty among women low in openness. Two longitudinal studies investigated the (mal)adaptive consequences of adopting a traditional gender ideology for women high or low in openness in dealing with challenging transitions. Study 2 examined whether endorsing or rejecting traditional gender role beliefs might help female (but not male) students to maintain a sense of self-efficacy and subjective well-being during the transition of graduating from high school (N = 520, 17-22 years). Study 3 (N = 297; 20-53 years) tested the same model for women in middle adulthood during the transition from parental leave to reentry into work life. For both studies, latent growth analyses showed that endorsing traditional gender role beliefs contributed to self-efficacy and subjective well-being among women low in openness. By contrast, for women high in openness, rejecting traditional gender role beliefs had a positive effect on their relative level of self-efficacy and subjective well-being. Functions of ideologies in the context of challenging transitions are discussed.
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- 2012
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49. Is Longing Only for Germans? A Cross-Cultural Comparison of Sehnsucht in Germany and the United States
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Fredda Blanchard-Fields, Susanne Scheibe, Alexandra M. Freund, Maja Wiest, Social Psychology, University of Zurich, and Scheibe, S
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Male ,Culture of the United States ,Emotions ,3317 Demography ,Personal life ,Personal Satisfaction ,GOALS ,Developmental psychology ,German ,Germany ,Adaptation, Psychological ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Everyday life ,PERSPECTIVE ,media_common ,Aged, 80 and over ,REGRETS ,10093 Institute of Psychology ,cross-cultural comparison ,life longings ,Middle Aged ,SELF ,personal utopia ,language ,Female ,HEALTH ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Attitude to Health ,Adult ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Young Adult ,Utopias ,DEVELOPMENTAL-PSYCHOLOGY ,EMOTION ,Humans ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,Aged ,HAPPINESS ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,DECLINE ,Life satisfaction ,Cross-cultural studies ,language.human_language ,Self Concept ,United States ,Sehnsucht ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Well-being ,Happiness ,150 Psychology - Abstract
Sehnsucht, the longing or yearning for ideal yet seemingly unreachable states of life, is a salient topic in German culture and has proven useful for understanding self-regulation across adulthood in a German sample (e.g., Scheibe, Freund, & Baltes, 2007). The current study tested whether findings for German samples could be generalized to the more individualistic and agentic U.S. American culture. Four samples of U.S. American and German participants (total N = 1,276) age 18 to 81 years reported and rated their 2 most important life longings and completed measures of subjective well-being and health. Measurement equivalence was established at the level of factor loadings for central life longing characteristics. German and U.S. American participants did not differ in self-reported ease of identifying personal life longings or their intensity. In comparison to Germans, however, U.S. Americans associated life longings less with utopian, unattainable states and reported less salience of the concept in everyday life. Associations with measures of adaptation suggest that life longings can be both functional and dysfunctional for development in both cultures.
- Published
- 2011
50. Association between sleep duration and intelligence scores in healthy children
- Author
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Peter Achermann, Anja Geiger, Oskar G. Jenni, University of Zurich, and Jenni, O G
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Male ,Psychometrics ,Intelligence ,Statistics as Topic ,10050 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology ,3317 Demography ,610 Medicine & health ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Developmental psychology ,Child Development ,Cognition ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Attention ,Cognitive skill ,Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance ,Child ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Demography ,Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children ,Intelligence Tests ,3204 Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Intelligence quotient ,Actigraphy ,Sleep in non-human animals ,3319 Life-span and Life-course Studies ,10036 Medical Clinic ,10076 Center for Integrative Human Physiology ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,Female ,Sleep ,Psychology - Abstract
We examined the association between sleep behavior and cognitive functioning in 60 healthy children between 7 and 11 years of age under nonexperimental conditions. Intellectual abilities were assessed by the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (4th edition) and sleep variables by questionnaires, actigraphy, and sleep diaries. Correlation analysis revealed a negative association between sleep duration on weekends and measures of intelligence (full-scale IQ, r = -.29; fluid IQ, r = -.36). The regression coefficient for sleep duration on weekends was -6.11 (SE = 2.09), indicating an increase of 6.11 points on fluid IQ scores for each hour of shorter sleep duration. Attention measures did not correlate with cognitive or sleep variables. Daytime sleepiness as a potential moderator of the relationship between sleep duration and cognitive performance was not related to cognitive or sleep variables. We conclude that children with higher daytime cognitive efficiency (reflected by higher intelligence scores) show increased nighttime efficiency (reflected by shorter sleep duration). In the light of the neural efficiency hypothesis, the current results argue for an extension of the original theory-referring not only to daytime but also to nighttime behavior.
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- 2010
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