97 research outputs found
The social meaning of inherited financial assets: moral ambivalences of intergenerational transfers
What do inherited financial assets signify to heirs and testators and how does this shape their conduct? Based on grounded theory methodology and twenty open, thematically structured interviews with US heirs, future heirs and testators, this article explicates a theoretical account that proposes a moral ambivalence as the core category to understand the social meaning of inherited financial assets. In particular, the analysis reveals that the social meaning of inherited assets is a contingent, individual compromise between seeing inherited assets as unachieved wealth and seeing them as family means of support. Being the lifetime achievement of another person, inheritances are, on the one hand, morally dubious and thus difficult to appropriate. Yet in terms of family solidarity, inheritances are "family money," which is used when need arises. Taken from this angle, inheriting is not the transfer of one individual's privately held property to another person, but rather the succession of the social status as support-giver along with the resources that belong to this status to the family's next generation. Heirs need to find a personal compromise between these poles, which always leaves room for interpretation
Social Mobility and Perceived Discrimination:Adding an Intergenerational Perspective
This article adds an intergenerational perspective to the study of perceived ethnic discrimination. It proposes the conjecture that perceived discrimination tends to increase with parental education, particularly among those children of immigrants who have attained only mediocre levels of education themselves. I discuss that this conjecture may be developed as an argument that comes in two versions: a narrow version about explicit downward (intergenerational) mobility and a wide version about unfulfilled mobility aspirations more generally. Analyses based on the six-country comparative EURISLAM survey sup-port the argument: parental education positively predicts perceived discrimination in general, but among the less educated this relation is most pronounced whereas it is absent among those with tertiary education. A replication and falsification test based on the German IAB-SOEP Migration Sample reconfirms the main finding and provides further original pieces of evidence. The analyses suggest processes associated with unfulfilled mobility aspirations as the more plausible underlying reason
Ethnic Diversity and Social Integration - What are the Consequences of Ethnic Residential Boundaries and Halos for Social Integration in Germany?
Does immigration erode the social integration of contemporary mass-scale societies? Continued immigration and corresponding growing ethnic, racial, and religious diversity have prompted this important and highly controversial question. This article gives a brief introduction to the scientific literature on this question and derives from it the following gap that it seeks to address: According to a small number of studies on related but different topics, immigration may be detrimental to social integration if it physically manifests as one of two specific types of ethnic residential segregation. The contested boundaries hypothesis has it that border regions sandwiched between ethnically defined neighborhoods are particularly conflict prone and characterized by increased rates of crime. The halo-effect hypothesis claims that majority members who live in homogenous mainstream neighborhoods that border on ethnically diverse ones (or are even encircled by them) are more likely to vote for right-wing populist parties. In this article, we expand both approaches to the study of social integration in theoretical and empirical terms. With respect to theory building, we discuss why social integration, as indicated by social trust and community attachment, should suffer from these two types of ethnic segregation. To test these claims empirically, we use data from the geo-coded German General Social Survey (ALLBUS/GGSS) 2016 and 2018 that we merge with 100-m × 100‑m spatial grid data from the German Census 2011. These data allow us to apply edge detection techniques to identify ethnic residential boundaries, and our recently developed donut-method to measure ethnic residential halos. To our knowledge our study is the first investigation into the arguably important question whether ethnic residential boundaries and halos erode social integration. - Online Appendix: https://kzfss.uni-koeln.de/sites/kzfss/pdf/Juenger-Schaeffer.pdfrodiert Einwanderung die soziale Integration gegenwärtiger Massengesellschaften? Die anhaltende Einwanderung und die damit einhergehende wachsende ethnische und religiöse Vielfalt haben diese relevante und höchst umstrittene Frage aufgeworfen. Dieser Beitrag gibt eine kurze Einführung in die wissenschaftliche Literatur zu dieser Frage und leitet daraus die folgende Forschungslücke ab, die er zu schließen versucht: Einer kleinen Anzahl von Studien zu verwandten, aber unterschiedlichen Themen zufolge kann die Einwanderung sozialer Integration abträglich sein, wenn sie sich physisch als eine von zwei spezifischen Arten der ethnischen Wohnsegregation manifestiert. Die Hypothese der Contested Boundaries besagt, dass Grenzregionen, die zwischen ethnisch definierten Nachbarschaften liegen, besonders konfliktträchtig und durch erhöhte Kriminalitätsraten gekennzeichnet sind. Die Halo-Effekt-Hypothese besagt, dass Angehörige der ethnischen Mehrheit, die in ethnisch-homogenen Wohnvierteln leben, die jedoch an ethnisch-diverse Wohnviertel grenzen (oder sogar von diesen umgeben sind), mit größerer Wahrscheinlichkeit rechtspopulistische Parteien wählen. In diesem Beitrag erweitern wir beide Ansätze zur Untersuchung sozialer Integration in theoretischer und empirischer Hinsicht. Im Hinblick auf die Theoriebildung erörtern wir, warum soziale Integration, definiert durch soziales Vertrauen und Community Attachment, unter diesen beiden Arten der ethnischen Segregation leiden sollte. Um diese Behauptungen empirisch zu testen, verwenden wir Daten aus der geokodierten Allgemeinen Bevölkerungsumfrage Sozialwissenschaften (ALLBUS/GGSS) 2016 und 2018, die wir mit 100 m × 100 m-Rasterdaten aus dem Zensus 2011 zusammenführen. Diese Daten ermöglichen uns die Anwendung von Kantendetektionstechniken zur Identifizierung ethnischer Wohngrenzen sowie unserer kürzlich entwickelten Donut-Methode zur Messung von Halos. Unsere Studie ist die erste Untersuchung zu der wichtigen Frage, ob ethnisch-residentielle Grenzen und Halos soziale Integration untergraben
Career trajectories into undereducation: Which skills and resources substitute formal education in the intergenerational transmission of advantage?
A significant share of employees in Europe has less formal training than is required by their job; they are undereducated. We use harmonized panel data from the United Kingdom and Germany to investigate the skills and resources allowing the undereducated to develop careers in occupations supposedly beyond their reach. Our theoretical approach complements individual-centered labor market theory with an intergenerational mobility perspective which regards undereducation as a form of family status maintenance. Our empirical results show that persons whose (non-)cognitive skills exceed their formal education are more likely to be undereducated in the cross-section, and to enter undereducated employment or be promoted into it throughout the life course. Yet beyond individual merit, parental socio-economic status is a similarly-important predictor of these outcomes; our analyses even trace a significant share of the importance of (non-)cognitive skills to it. To complete our intergenerational argument, we finally demonstrate that undereducation acts as a pathway to the intergenerational reproduction of earnings inequality - more so, in fact, than the avoidance of overeducation. These results are remarkably similar across the UK and Germany, although some country differences suggest higher skill-induced career mobility in Britain and stronger origin effects in Germany. We discuss promising avenues for further comparative research in the conclusion
Why You Should Always Include a Random Slope for the Lower-Level Variable Involved in a Cross-Level Interaction
Mixed-effects multilevel models are often used to investigate cross-level interactions, a specific type of context effect that may be understood as an upper-level variable moderating the association between a lower-level predictor and the outcome. We argue that multilevel models involving cross-level interactions should always include random slopes on the lower-level components of those interactions. Failure to do so will usually result in severely anti-conservative statistical inference. We illustrate the problem with extensive Monte Carlo simulations and examine its practical relevance by studying 30 prototypical cross-level interactions with European Social Survey data for 28 countries. In these empirical applications, introducing a random slope term reduces the absolute t-ratio of the cross-level interaction term by 31 per cent or more in three quarters of cases, with an average reduction of 42 per cent. Many practitioners seem to be unaware of these issues. Roughly half of the cross-level interaction estimates published in the European Sociological Review between 2011 and 2016 are based on models that omit the crucial random slope term. Detailed analysis of the associated test statistics suggests that many of the estimates would not reach conventional thresholds for statistical significance in correctly specified models that include the random slope. This raises the question how much robust evidence of cross-level interactions sociology has actually produced over the past decades
Multilevel Analysis with Few Clusters: Improving Likelihood-based Methods to Provide Unbiased Estimates and Accurate Inference
Quantitative comparative social scientists have long worried about the performance of multilevel models when the number of upper-level units is small. Adding to these concerns, an influential Monte Carlo study by Stegmueller (2013) suggests that standard maximum-likelihood (ML) methods yield biased point estimates and severely anti-conservative inference with few upper-level units. In this article, the authors seek to rectify this negative assessment. First, they show that ML estimators of coefficients are unbiased in linear multilevel models. The apparent bias in coefficient estimates found by Stegmueller can be attributed to Monte Carlo Error and a flaw in the design of his simulation study. Secondly, they demonstrate how inferential problems can be overcome by using restricted ML estimators for variance parameters and a t-distribution with appropriate degrees of freedom for statistical inference. Thus, accurate multilevel analysis is possible within the framework that most practitioners are familiar with, even if there are only a few upper-level units
The ethnic diversity and collective action survey (EDCAS): technical report
"The EDCA-Survey is a large scale CATI telephone survey conducted in three countries: Germany, France and the Netherlands. The survey was designed to test theoretical arguments on the effects of ethnic diversity on social capital and civic engagement. This aim demands for a sophisticated design. The survey is not representative for the entire populations of Germany, France or the Netherlands. Instead, the basic population is the population over the age of 18 in 74 selected regions in Germany, France and the Netherlands that have sufficient language skills to conduct an interview in the language of their country of residence, or in the case of the oversample of people with
Turkish migration background to conduct the interview in Turkish. The aim of the survey is to enable the comparison of these 74 regions, which vary on contextual characteristics of interest. In addition, the EDCA-Survey includes one oversample of migrants in general (24%) and an additional second oversample of Turkish migrants in particular (14%). The oversampling is the same within each of the 74 regions, each of which has about 100 observations and seven specially chosen cities even 500. This survey design is an important characteristic of the EDCA-Survey and distinguishes it from other available data. This is important since one aim of the EDCA-Survey is to enable the aggregation of contextual characteristics from the survey itself. Overall, 10.200 completed interviews were conducted - 7500 in Germany, 1400 in France and 1300 in the Netherlands." (author's abstract)"Der EDCA-Survey ist eine CATI gestützte Telefonumfrage, die in Deutschland,
Frankreich und den Niederlanden durchgeführt wurde. Die Umfrage wurde
mit dem Ziel erhoben, Effekte ethnischer Diversität auf Sozialkapital und
Zivilengagement zu untersuchen. Dieses Vorhaben setzt ein komplexes
Surveydesign voraus. So ist die Umfrage nicht repräsentativ für die Bevölkerungen
von Deutschland, Frankreich und den Niederlanden. Stattdessen
bildet die Grundgesamtheit die Bevölkerung von 74 ausgewählten Regionen
der drei Länder, die über die Sprachfertigkeit verfügen, ein Interview in
der Landessprache oder gegebenenfalls auf Türkisch zu führen. Ziel ist der
Vergleich dieser 74 Regionen, die sich hinsichtlich verschiedener Charakteristika
unterscheiden. Darüber hinaus weist der EDCA-Survey eine überproportionale
Stichprobe von Personen mit Migrationshintergrund (24%) und
eine zweite überproportionale Stichprobe von Personen mit türkischem
Migrationshintergrund (14%) auf. Diese überproportionale Stichprobe wurde
in jeder der 74 Regionen gezogen, in denen jeweils ca. 100 Interviews durchgeführt
wurden. In sieben speziell ausgesuchten Regionen wurden 500
Interviews geführt. Dieses Surveydesign ist ein zentrales Charakteristikum
des EDCA-Surveys und ermöglicht die Aggregation von Kontextmerkmalen
aus dem Survey. Insgesamt wurden 10.200 vollständige Interviews erhoben
– 7500 in Deutschland, 1400 in Frankreich und 1300 in den Niederlanden." (Autorenreferat
Why trust? A mixed-method investigation of the origins and meaning of trust during the COVID-19 lockdown in Denmark
Trust is highlighted as central to effective disease management. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Denmark seemed to embody this understanding. Characterizing the Danish response were high levels of public compliance with government regulations and restrictions coupled with high trust in the government and other members of society. In this article, we first revisit prior claims about the importance of trust in securing compliant citizen behaviour based on a weekly time-use survey that we conducted during the first weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic (2 April–18 May 2020). Analysis of activity episodes, rather than merely self-reported compliance, both reconfirms the importance of institutional trust and nuances prior suggestions of detrimental effects of trust in other citizens. These survey-based results are further augmented through thematic analysis of 21 in-depth interviews with respondents sampled from the survey participants. The qualitative analysis reveals two themes, the first focusing on trust in others in Danish society and the second on the history of trust in Denmark. Both themes are based on narratives layered in cultural, institutional and inter-personal levels and further underline that institutional and social trust are complementary and not countervailing. We conclude by discussing how our analysis suggests pathways towards an increased social contract between governments, institutions and individuals that might be of use during future global emergencies and to the overall functioning of democracies
Imagining Life Beyond a Crisis: A Four Quadrant Model to Conceptualize Possible Futures
In this article we report evidence from a series of semi-structured interviews with a broad sample of people living in Denmark (n = 21), about their perspectives on the future during the first months of the global Covid-19 pandemic. The thematic and discursive analyses, based on an abductive ontology, illustrate imaginings of the future along two vectors: individual to collective and descriptive to moral. On a descriptive and individual level, people imagined getting through the pandemic on a myopic day-by-day basis; on a descriptive and collective level, people imagined changes to work and socializing. Their future was bound and curtailed by their immediate present. On a moral and individual level, respondents were less detailed in their reports, but some vowed to change their behaviors. On a moral and collective level, respondents reported what the world should be like and discussed changes to environmental behaviors such as traveling, commuting, and work. The model suggests the domain of individual moral imaginings is the most difficult domain for people to imagine beyond the practicalities of their everyday lives. The implications of this model for comprehending imaginations of the future are discussed
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