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Beer, de P.T. (Paul)
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Brals (Daniella)
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Bruggeman (Jeroen)
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Deken, de (Johan)
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Dörfler, L.N. (Laura)
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Ferrer-i-Carbonell (Ada)
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Groot (Wim)
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Dr Gërxhani (Klarita)
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Hartog (Joop)
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Heemskerk (Eelke)
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Kaandorp, C.S. (Casper)
UvA, AIAS Plantage Muidergracht 12 1018 TV, Amsterdam Netherlands tel: +31 (0)20 525 7131 c.s.kaandorp@uva.nl
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Kaminska, M.E. (Monika Ewa)
UvA, AIAS Plantage Muidergracht 12 1018 TV, Amsterdam Netherlands tel: +31 (0)20 525 7210 m.e.kaminska@uva.nl
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Kittel (Bernhard)
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Klaveren, van (Chris)
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Kocer (Ruya Gokhan)
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Korthouwer (Gerben)
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Koster (Ferry)
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Maassen-Van den Brink (Henriette)
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Meer, van der (Marc)
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Oosterbeek (Hessel)
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Plug (Erik)
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Praag, van (Bernhard)
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Putman (Lisa)
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Raess (Damien)
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Salverda, W. (Wiemer)
UvA, AIAS Plantage Muidergracht 12 1018 TV, Amsterdam Netherlands tel: +31205254199 w.salverda@uva.nl
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Schils (Trudie)
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Schreuder (Kilian)
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Stimac (Vid)
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Tijdens (Kea)
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Visser (Jelle)
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Werfhorst, van de (Herman)
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Wetzels (Cecile)
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Wiekenkamp (Nynke)
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Yerkes (Mara)
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Zorlu (Aslan)
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koster_bruggeman.pdf
The institutional embeddedness of social capital. A multilevel investigation across 15 advanced welfare states(Ferry Koster, Jeroen Bruggeman)download this file
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salverda2006.pdf
Firm Behaviour in the Low-wage Labour Market: A Taxonomic Approach to the Role of Institutions - for the Netherlands(Wiemer Salverda)download this file
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tijdens2006.pdf
Part-time working and overtime hours. Paid and unpaid overtime workingin the Netherlands and Germany(Kea Tijdens)download this file
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vandewerfhorst_luijkx2005.pdf
Inequality Maintained through Horizontal Educational Choices in the Netherlands: A Cohort Comparison(Herman G. van de Werfhorst, Ruud Luijkx)We have examined the relationship between social origin and education by looking at it in more detail than is usually done. Rather than seeing both origin and education as hierarchical characteristics, we argue that both should be disentangled in more detailed combinations of hierarchical levels and horizontal fields. Based on recent contributions in social class theory it is argued that educational decisions are made on a more fine-grained level than usually studied. Children often choose fields of study in which affinity is found with the class fraction of their parents. This way, social selection into fields of study is guided by the domain of parents’ occupation. Moreover, it is shown that choices that reflect such affinities have become more prevalent across more recent cohorts, suggesting that disaggregating social class and education into its constitutive parts has increased in relevance. This pattern conforms to the mechanism of Inequalities Maintained through Horizontal educational choices, IMH.download this file
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vanklaveren_maassenvandenbrink.pdf
Intra-household Work Time Synchronization. Togetherness or material benefits?(Chris van Klaveren, Henriette Maassen van den Brink)If partners derive utility from joint leisure time, it is expected that they will coordinate their work schedules in order to increase the amount of joint leisure. In order to control for differences in constraints and selection effects, this paper uses a new matching procedure, providing answers to the following questions: (1) Do partners coordinate their work schedules and does this result in work time synchronization?; (2) which partners synchronize more work hours?; and (3) is there a preference for togetherness?
We find that coordination results in more synchronized work hours. The presence of children in the household is the main cause why some partners synchronize their work times less than other partners. Finally, partners coordinate their work schedules in order to have more joint leisure time, which is evidence for togetherness preferences.
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wetzels.pdf
Determinant’s of Mother’s age at first birth in Amsterdam: Beyond Human Capital(Cecile Wetzels)This study analyses unique, recent and representative data on the timing of first child in Amsterdam, a city in which more than half of the new born have at least one migrant parent. In addition to education and labour market hours choices among couples, this study includes the effects of migration background by distinguishing all possible combinations of own country of birth, partner’s country of birth and women’s parents’ country of birth. First, the study shows that women in couples with similar labour market hours choices and strong investments in paid work (either fulltime, or both long part-time) time their 1st child later in life. Secondly, immigration effects on the timing of motherhood have to be separated from specific country of origin effects. Controlling for countries of birth (such as Turkey and Morocco) which represent the countries that provided cheap labour to the Dutch labour market in the 1960s and 1970s, we find an independent effect of earlier timing of the first birth for import bride grooms. This effect is stronger than the effect of ethnically endogamous couples on the timing of the first child. Furthermore, controlled for migration background and for specific country of birth such as former cheap labour providing countries, all other women originating abroad time their 1st birth later in life than Dutch women.
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zorlu.pdf
Who leaves the city? The influence of ethnic segregation and family ties(Aslan Zorlu)download this file
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