social inequality and mobility revisited · 2020-02-17 · isa rc28 (social stratification and...

40
SPRING MEETING 2017 COLOGNE | MARCH 30 – APRIL 1 SOCIAL INEQUALITY AND MOBILITY REVISITED CHALLENGES THROUGH RECENT DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS

Upload: others

Post on 10-Jul-2020

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Spring Meeting 2017 Cologne | MarCh 30 – april 1

SoCial inequality and Mobility reviSited ChallengeS through reCent deMographiC trendS

2 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

© w

ww

. koe

lnto

uris

mus

.de

Impressum: http://www.portal.uni-koeln.de/impressum.html?L=0Contact: [email protected]: Ulrike Kerstingrc28.uni-koeln.de

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 3

Welcome Note

Dear Colleagues,

Welcome to the RC28 Spring Meeting 2017 at the University of Cologne!

One of the first meetings of the predecessor of the Research Committee on Social Stratifi-cation and Mobility (RC28) took place in Cologne in December 1961 reminding us of the longstanding tradition of stratification research in Cologne. Some of this first conference con-tributions were published as a special issue on „Soziale Schichtung und soziale Mobilität“ (Social Stratification and Social Mobility) of the Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsy-chologie in 1968, edited by David V. Glass and René König. Among these contributions was an early version of the „American Occupational Structure“ by Peter M. Blau and Otis D. Duncan.

Fifty-five years later we welcome back the RC28 to Cologne for the 2017 Spring Meeting un-der the conference theme “Social Inequality and Mobility Revisited – Challenges Through Re-cent Demographic Change”. With this overarching theme we connect social stratification and mobility to profound changes in society due to demographic behaviors of individuals and their social contexts. Family formation and fertility, migration and integration as well as ageing and longevity influence social stratification, mobility and inequality: For example, family formation and fertility shape intergenerational mobility, migration and integration speak to economic structures and social cohesion, and an aging population requires answers to questions of care and welfare state transfers. Processes that we as RC28 members aim to identify.

We are particularly looking forward to the contributions that the conference will make to these topics and to all other areas of social stratification and mobility. The rich conference pro-gram will keep us busy and offers many stimulating ideas for discussion and future research.

We hope that you enjoy the conference, and the city of Cologne.

The RC28 Cologne Spring Meeting Local Organizers

Marita Jacob, Judith Offerhaus and Michael Kühhirt

Phot

o: L

isa

Belle

r

4 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Special ThanksWe would like to thank our program committee for support in reviewing the submissions and ensuring

high-quality contributions to be presented at this conference.

Gerrit Bauer Thomas Biegert Nate Breznau Valentina di Stasio

Christian Ebner Lea Ellwardt Jani Erola Karsten Hank

Juho Härkönen Florian R. Hertel Steffen Hillmert Markus Klein

Corinna Kleinert Irena Kogan Philipp Lersch Martin Neugebauer

Fabian T. Pfeffer Nadine Reibling Merlin Schaeffer Steffen Schindler

Susanne Strauß Moris Triventi Michael Wagner Felix Weiss

We are grateful to Sophia Schneider for organizational support, Petra Altendorf for administrative sup-

port and Ulrike Kersting for the design.

We thank the German Science Foundation (DFG), SocioCologne and the Department of Management,

Economics and Social Sciences of the University of Cologne for financial support.

Supported by

INSTITUTE OF SOCIOLOGy AND SOCiAL PSyCHOLOGy

Facu

lty o

f Man

agem

ent, economics and Social Sciences

SocioCologne e.v.

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 5

Table of Content

Conference Venue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Lunch and Coffee Breaks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8

Cloakroom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Lost & Found. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

internet Access . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Public Transportation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Twitter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Photography and Filming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9

Presentations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Poster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Questions and Assistance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

Welcome Reception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Conference Dinner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Social Event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Time Table . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

Parallel Sessions Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

Detailed Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

index of Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

6 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Conference VenueThe conference venue is located in the heart of the University of Cologne campus.

It can easily be reached by public transportation.

From Köln hauptbahnhof (Cologne Central Station):

Take the subway/tram lines 16 or 18 to the stop “Neumarkt“, change to line 9 in the direction “Sülz“

to the stop “Universität”. From there it is a short walk (roughly 5 minutes) to the conference venue.

The trams run roughly every 10 minutes.

From Köln Messe-deutz:

Take subway/tram line 9 in the direction “Sülz“ to the stop “Universität“.

From Köln Süd:

Take the exit “Zülpicher Strasse“. After the exit, walk along Zülpicher Strasse to the intersection of Uni-

versitätsstrasse. Turn right onto Universitätsstrasse to the conference venue (roughly 10 minutes walk).

Main Building University of Cologne

© U

nive

rsitä

t zu

Köln

Seminar building

lecture hall building

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 7

The conference will take place in two buildings located opposite each other: the Lecture Hall Building

(Hörsaalgebäude, Universitätsstr. 35) and the Seminar Building (Seminargebäude, Universitätsstr. 37).

The parallel sessions take place in the Seminar Building (rooms S01 and S02 are located on the ground

floor, S11 and S12 on the first floor), the plenary sessions in the Lecture Hall Building (HS-A1). The

poster session starts in HS-A1 and takes place throughout the Lecture Hall Building.

you can find the registration and information desk and the cloakroom in the Lecture Hall Building.

you find quiet working spaces in room S15 in the Seminar Building.

During the conference, both buildings will open at 07:30 and close soon after the end of the sessions.

Seminar building

Seminar building

8 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

lecture hall building (hörsaalgebäude)

Lunch and Coffee Breaks Coffee, drinks and snacks will be served during coffee breaks in the foyer of the Lecture Hall Building

(ground and first floor). you can also get coffee (at your own expense) in the cafeteria of the Seminar

Building (Thursday and Friday only, 11:00 - 16:00).

Lunch will be served in the foyer of the Lecture Hall Building (ground and first floor).

Wine and finger food will be served during the poster session in the Lecture Hall Building.

We kindly ask you to refrain from taking food and drinks into the plenary and meeting rooms.

Poster exhibition

1st floor

Ground floor

plenary

registration Cloakroom

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 9

Cloakroom We offer a free coat check and luggage storage at the foyer of the Lecture Hall Building behind the

registration desk, however we cannot take any liability.

There are also small coin lockers on the ground floor of the Seminar Building.

Lost & Foundin case you find something during the conference or have lost or forgotten something, please come to

the registration desk.

internet Accessyou will receive a personalized internet access code (username and password) in your name tag to log

on to all wireless networks of the University of Cologne.

your “eduroam” access will also work on campus.

Public Transportationyou can find a public transportation ticket for the Cologne local train system (KVB) in your name tag.

it is valid for all inner-city trips during the conference period (March 30 to April 01). Please sign your

ticket for validation.

If you need a taxi, please call 0049 221 2882 or ask the registration desk to for assistance.

TwitterPlease follow us on Twitter (@rc28col) and mention us or #RC28 in your posts.

Photography and FilmingPlease note that a photographer will be taking pictures during the conference. These will be made avail-

able to conference participants only. There will also be a small film crew shooting material for a short

film about the RC28 Cologne Meeting. The film will be available on the conference website.

If you have any concerns, please do not hesitate to contact the conference staff at the registration desk.

10 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

PresentationsAll meeting rooms are equipped with laptops (Windows 7 Professional, OpenOffice 3.3), LCD projectors

and pointers.

Please load your presentation onto the computer using a memory stick prior to the session. We kindly

ask to arrive roughly 10 minutes early.

PosterPlease drop your poster (and printed handout copies) at the registration desk upon your arrival. Please

also provide an electronic version of your poster in case you have not already sent it to the conference

organizers. Conference staff will put up your poster before the poster session.

The poster session begins at 18:00 with a joint plenary introduction in HS-A1 (Lecture Hall Building).

Poster presenters are asked to arrive there at 17:45.

We will keep the posters up during the entire conference. In case you need to leave early, feel free to

take your poster down or notify the staff in case you do not want to keep it.

Questions and Assistance In case you need any help, please see the conference staff at the registration desk in the foyer of the

Lecture Hall Building.

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 11

Welcome ReceptionThe pre-conference reception takes place Wednesday evening from 18:30 onwards at the “Früh-

Lounge”, Sporergasse 1, close to the Cologne Cathedral. The entrance is at “Hotel Eden”; take the

elevator to the top floor.

you may pick up your conference materials and have a first Kölsch (Cologne beer) with us at the Recep-

tion.

Conference Dinner The conference dinner takes place Friday evening on the Köln-Düsseldorfer ship “MS Loreley”.

The ship is located at Pier 3 at the “Altstadtufer” (old city river bank). For orientation, you may also look

for the church “Groß St. Martin”. you can board the ship to join the reception from 18:30 onwards. The

ship leaves for the dinner cruise along the river Rhine at 19:30. Please make sure to arrive before that,

otherwise the ship may leave without you.

Please bring your conference badge for identification.

Travel grants, poster prizes and the significant scholarship award will be presented during the confer-

ence dinner.

Finally, you are encouraged to dance with us and our conference DJ till 01:00 at night!

Social Event We will have a historical walking tour with a night-watchman through the inner-city on Saturday, April

01 starting at 18:30. The meeting point is at the “Kreuzblume” (tall stone structure shaped like a cross)

in the main forecourt of the Cologne cathedral (Kardinal-Höffner-Platz). Please arrive at the “Kreuz-

blume” roughly 10 minutes before the start of the tour. The tour takes about 1.5 hours.

if you have signed up for the tour you will find your ticket in your name tag. Please bring the ticket to

the tour.

In case you are interested in joining the tour, please ask the conference staff at the registration desk.

We have a few spaces left and tickets will sell for 5 Euros on a first-come, first-serve basis.

For all three locations, please refer to the map on the back inside cover of this booklet (page 39).

12 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

time table thursday, March 30 locations

08:00 Registration and Coffee Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

09:00 Welcome and Plenary Session HS-A1, Lecture Hall Building

10:30 Coffee Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

11:00 Parallel Sessions S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

12:45 Lunch Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

13:45 Parallel Sessions S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

15:30 Coffee Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

16:00 Parallel Sessions S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

17:45 Short Break

18:00 Poster Session with Wine and Cheese HS-A1 and foyer, Lecture Hall Building

Friday, March 31 locations

08:30 Late Registration and Coffee Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

09:00 Parallel Sessions S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

10:45 Coffee Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

11:15 Plenary Session HS-A1, Lecture Hall Building

12:15 Lunch Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

13:30 Parallel Sessions S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

15:15 Coffee Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

15:45 Parallel Sessions S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

18:30 Conference Dinner Pier 3, Köln-Düsseldorfer ship „MS Loreley“

Saturday, april 01 locations

09:00 Coffee Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

09:30 Parallel Sessions S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

11:15 Coffee Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

11:45 Parallel Session S01, S02, S11, S12, Seminar Building

13:30 Late Lunch Break Foyer, Lecture Hall Building

14:30 Plenary Session and Farewell HS-A1, Lecture Hall Building

18:30 Social Event Cologne Cathedral, „Kreuzblume“

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 13

Shor

t Ses

sion

Ove

rvie

w

thur

sday

, Mar

ch 3

0, 2

017

plen

ary

Sess

ion

1 | M

arch

30,

09:

00-1

0:30

para

llel S

essi

ons

1 | M

arch

30,

11:

00-1

2:45

1.1

| Fam

ily a

nd p

artn

ersh

ip i:

Mat

ing

and

Fam

ily F

orm

atio

n

1.2

| edu

cati

on i:

prim

ary

educ

atio

n an

d its

Con

sequ

ence

s

1.3

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty I:

long

-ter

m in

equa

lity

and

his

tori

cal

pers

pect

ives

1.4

| lab

or M

arke

t i:

Mig

rant

s, d

iscr

imin

atio

n, S

kill

Mis

-

mat

ch

para

llel S

essi

ons

2 | M

arch

30,

13:

45-1

5:30

2.1

| Sib

ship

Siz

e an

d it

s Co

nseq

uenc

es2.

2 | e

duca

tion

ii:

Scho

ol a

nd C

lass

room

eff

ects

2.3

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty II

:

Soci

al M

obili

ty a

nd S

tatu

s a

ttai

nmen

t

(o-d

)

2.4

| Mig

rati

on a

nd in

tegr

atio

n i:

imm

igra

nts,

refu

gees

and

Soc

ial

Capi

tal

para

llel S

essi

ons

3 | M

arch

30,

16:

00-1

7:45

3.1

| edu

cati

on ii

i:

net

wor

ks, p

eers

and

Fri

ends

3.2

| edu

cati

on iv

:

Scho

ol-t

o-W

ork

tran

siti

ons

3.3

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty II

I:

Soci

al S

trat

ifica

tion

of C

ultu

re

3.4

| Mig

rati

on a

nd in

tegr

atio

n ii:

att

itud

es a

nd C

ultu

re

post

er S

essi

on |

Mar

ch 3

0, 1

8:00

-21:

00

14 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Frid

ay, M

arch

31,

201

7

para

llel S

essi

ons

4 | M

arch

31,

09:

00-1

0:45

4.1

| Fam

ily a

nd p

artn

ersh

ip ii

:

Fam

ily S

truc

ture

and

Chi

ld o

utco

mes

4.2

| edu

cati

on v

:

labo

r M

arke

t o

ppor

tuni

ties

and

re-

turn

s to

hig

her

educ

atio

n

4.3

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty IV

:

Mul

tige

nera

tion

al in

equa

lity

4.4

| hea

lth

and

Wel

lbei

ng i:

Caus

es a

nd C

onse

quen

ces

of l

ife S

atis

-

fact

ion

and

Wel

lbei

ng

plen

ary

Sess

ion

2 | M

arch

31,

11:

15-1

2:15

para

llel S

essi

ons

5 | M

arch

31,

13:

30-1

5:15

5.1

| inc

ome

and

Wea

lth

i:

hou

sing

and

hom

eow

ners

hip

5.2

| edu

cati

on v

i:

gen

der

Segr

egat

ion

and

ineq

ualit

y in

hig

her

educ

atio

n

5.3

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty V

:

educ

atio

nal r

epro

duct

ion

and

Chan

ges

in M

obili

ty

5.4

| Fam

ily a

nd p

artn

ersh

ip ii

i:

impa

ct o

f Fam

ily a

nd p

artn

ersh

ip o

n

empl

oym

ent

and

earn

ings

para

llel S

essi

ons

6 | M

arch

31,

15:

45-1

7:30

6.1

| inc

ome

and

Wea

lth

ii:

inco

me

ineq

ualit

y

6.2

| Mig

rati

on a

nd in

tegr

atio

n iii

:

Mig

rati

on a

nd e

duca

tion

6.3

| att

itud

es a

nd p

erce

ptio

ns in

Soci

al S

trat

ifica

tion

Res

earc

h

6.4

| lab

or M

arke

t ii:

gen

der

ineq

ualit

ies

in t

he l

abor

Mar

ket

Satu

rday

, apr

il 01

, 201

7

para

llel S

essi

ons

7 | a

pril

01, 0

9:30

-11:

15

7.1

| inc

ome

and

Wea

lth

iii:

Wea

lth

ineq

ualit

y

7.2

| Str

atifi

catio

n an

d M

obili

ty V

I:

Soci

al b

ackg

roun

d an

d ed

ucat

ion

(o-e

)

7.3

| lab

or M

arke

t iii

:

gen

der-(

a)ty

pica

l em

ploy

men

t

7.4

| hea

lth

and

Wel

lbei

ng ii

:

agi

ng a

nd M

orta

lity

para

llel S

essi

ons

8 | a

pril

01, 1

1:45

-13:

30

8.1

| lab

or M

arke

t iv

:

Cons

eque

nces

of J

ob l

oss

and

une

m-

ploy

men

t

8.2

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty V

II:

non

-Cog

niti

ve S

kills

in M

obili

ty

rese

arch

Sess

ion

8.3

| lab

or M

arke

t v:

app

licat

ions

, tra

inin

g an

d d

ualiz

atio

n

8.4

| Met

hods

in S

ocia

l Str

atifi

cati

on

rese

arch

plen

ary

Sess

ion

3 | a

pril

01, 1

4:30

-15:

45

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 15

Frid

ay, M

arch

31,

201

7

para

llel S

essi

ons

4 | M

arch

31,

09:

00-1

0:45

4.1

| Fam

ily a

nd p

artn

ersh

ip ii

:

Fam

ily S

truc

ture

and

Chi

ld o

utco

mes

4.2

| edu

cati

on v

:

labo

r M

arke

t o

ppor

tuni

ties

and

re-

turn

s to

hig

her

educ

atio

n

4.3

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty IV

:

Mul

tige

nera

tion

al in

equa

lity

4.4

| hea

lth

and

Wel

lbei

ng i:

Caus

es a

nd C

onse

quen

ces

of l

ife S

atis

-

fact

ion

and

Wel

lbei

ng

plen

ary

Sess

ion

2 | M

arch

31,

11:

15-1

2:15

para

llel S

essi

ons

5 | M

arch

31,

13:

30-1

5:15

5.1

| inc

ome

and

Wea

lth

i:

hou

sing

and

hom

eow

ners

hip

5.2

| edu

cati

on v

i:

gen

der

Segr

egat

ion

and

ineq

ualit

y in

hig

her

educ

atio

n

5.3

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty V

:

educ

atio

nal r

epro

duct

ion

and

Chan

ges

in M

obili

ty

5.4

| Fam

ily a

nd p

artn

ersh

ip ii

i:

impa

ct o

f Fam

ily a

nd p

artn

ersh

ip o

n

empl

oym

ent

and

earn

ings

para

llel S

essi

ons

6 | M

arch

31,

15:

45-1

7:30

6.1

| inc

ome

and

Wea

lth

ii:

inco

me

ineq

ualit

y

6.2

| Mig

rati

on a

nd in

tegr

atio

n iii

:

Mig

rati

on a

nd e

duca

tion

6.3

| att

itud

es a

nd p

erce

ptio

ns in

Soci

al S

trat

ifica

tion

Res

earc

h

6.4

| lab

or M

arke

t ii:

gen

der

ineq

ualit

ies

in t

he l

abor

Mar

ket

Satu

rday

, apr

il 01

, 201

7

para

llel S

essi

ons

7 | a

pril

01, 0

9:30

-11:

15

7.1

| inc

ome

and

Wea

lth

iii:

Wea

lth

ineq

ualit

y

7.2

| Str

atifi

catio

n an

d M

obili

ty V

I:

Soci

al b

ackg

roun

d an

d ed

ucat

ion

(o-e

)

7.3

| lab

or M

arke

t iii

:

gen

der-(

a)ty

pica

l em

ploy

men

t

7.4

| hea

lth

and

Wel

lbei

ng ii

:

agi

ng a

nd M

orta

lity

para

llel S

essi

ons

8 | a

pril

01, 1

1:45

-13:

30

8.1

| lab

or M

arke

t iv

:

Cons

eque

nces

of J

ob l

oss

and

une

m-

ploy

men

t

8.2

| Str

atifi

cati

on a

nd M

obili

ty V

II:

non

-Cog

niti

ve S

kills

in M

obili

ty

rese

arch

Sess

ion

8.3

| lab

or M

arke

t v:

app

licat

ions

, tra

inin

g an

d d

ualiz

atio

n

8.4

| Met

hods

in S

ocia

l Str

atifi

cati

on

rese

arch

plen

ary

Sess

ion

3 | a

pril

01, 1

4:30

-15:

45

Detailed Program

thursday, March 30, 2017

plenary Session 1 | March 30, 09:00-10:30

Session P1 (HS-A1) | Welcome and plenary talk

Chair: Marita Jacob

Welcome

Werner Mellis

Dean of Department of Management, Economics and Social Sciences, University of Cologne

introduction

Marita Jacob

institute of Sociology and Social Psychology, University of Cologne

Social inequalities in productive and Successful aging across europe

Karsten Hank

institute of Sociology and Social Psychology, University of Cologne

parallel Sessions 1 | March 30, 11:00-12:45

Session 1.1 (S01) | Family and partnership i: Mating and Family Formation

Chair: Sergi vidal

occupational gender Segregation and occupational assortative Mating across europe

André Grow; Jan Van Bavel

Catholic University Leuven

Self-employment, entrepreneurship and Fertility

Francesco Billari1; Berkay Özcan2; Concetta Rondinelli3 1 Nuffield College, University of Oxford; 2 London School of Economics; 3 Bank of italy

does educational expansion Favor increased homogamy over the life Course? evidence From a recent

French Survey

Milan, Bouchet-Valat1; Sébastien Grobon1,2 1 French National Institute for Demographic Studies (INED); 2 French National Institute for Statistics (INSEE)

16 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Session 1.2 (S02) | education i: primary education and its Consequences

Chair: Jani erola

Social stratification in parenting values: a micro-class approach using the UK Millennium Cohort Study

Katherin Barg1; William Baker2 1Glasgow University; 2Cardiff University

the association between children’s vocabulary at age 3 and the transition from primary school to the

academic track of secondary schooling for children of turkish origin and native-born parents in germany

Birgit Becker

Goethe University Frankfurt

anticipation of school entry in italy: consequences for inequalities of educational opportunities

Moris Triventi1,2; Fabrizio Bernardi2 1University of Trento; 2European University Institute (EUI), Florence

educational inequality in india: an analysis of gender differences in reading and Mathematics

Karim Sk

Population Council, india

Session 1.3 (S11) | Stratification and Mobility I: Long-Term Inequality and Historical Perspectives

Chair: Florian r. hertel

long-term trends in intergenerational and Multigenerational occupational Mobility in the united States,

1850-2013

Xi Song1; Karen Rolf2; Joseph Ferrie3; Catherine Massey4; yu Xie5 1University of Chicago; 2University of Nebraska at Omaha; 3Northwestern University; 4University of Michigan; 5Princeton University

like My Mother before Me: the effect of mother’s position on her children’s status attainment in the 19th

century and early 20th century

Siyang Kong1; Ineke Maas1,2; Marco H.D. van Leeuwen1 1Utrecht University; 2Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

a century of change in global educational inequality between and among genders

iñaki Permanyer; Diederik Boertien

Center for Demographic Studies (CED), Barcelona

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 17

Session 1.4 (S12) | labor Market i: Migrants, discrimination, Skill Mismatch

Chair: Merlin Schaeffer

perceived ethnic discrimination in the transition from school to work in germany

Kristina Lindemann

Goethe University Frankfurt

Migrants in the OECD: Over-qualified but under-skilled? An international comparison of labor market integration

Anja Perry

GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Cologne

the dynamics of immigrant-native labor market differentials in West germany, 1976-2012

Jonas Wiedner1; Johannes Giesecke2,3 1University of Cologne; 2Humboldt University Berlin; 3Berlin institute for integration and Migration Research (BiM)

occupational closure, licensing and skills mismatch among immigrant workers in germany

Daniela Rohrbach-Schmidt

German Federal institute for Vocational Education and Training (BiBB), Bonn

parallel Sessions 2 | March 30, 13:45-15:30

Session 2.1 (S01) | Sibship Size and its Consequences

Chair: vered Kraus

older Sister intellectual penalty in China: gender, Family SeS, and resource

Jiaxin Shi

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

home alone: being an only Child at home and academic performance

Seongsoo Choi; Christiaan Monden

University of Oxford

Fewer Siblings, more Wealth? Sibship Size and Wealth attainment in germany

Philipp Lersch

University of Cologne

18 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Session 2.2 (S02) | education ii: School and Classroom effects

Chair: Carlo S. barone

instructional quality and achievement inequality: how effective is teaching on closing the achievement gap

in germany?

Cansu Atlay1; Nicole Tieben1; Steffen Hillmert2; Benjamin Fauth3 1LEAD Graduate School and Research Network, University of Tübingen; 2University of Tübingen; 3Hector Research Insti-

tute of Education Science and Psychology, University of Tübingen

the Causal effects of advanced Mathematics Coursework: evidence from 328 School-level regression

discontinuities

Andrew McEachin1; Thad Domina2; Andrew Penner3 1RAND Corporation; 2University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill; 3University of California, Irvine

Compensating or compounding effects: does school attended alleviate or exacerbate the effects of family

background on academic achievement?

Jenny Chesters

University of Melbourne

Session 2.3 (S11) | Stratification and Mobility II: Social Mobility and Status Attainment (O-D)

Chair: louis-andré vallet

the direct effect of social origin on occupational attainment in comparative perspective

Valeria Breuker; Gabriele Ballarino; Nazareno Panichella

University of Milan

intergenerational transmission of Socioeconomic Status: Mediated by the Family trajectory?

Joanne Sophie Muller1,2; Nicole Hiekel1,3; Aart C. Liefbroer1,2,4 1Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI); 2University of Groningen; 3University of Cologne; 4Vrije

Universiteit Amsterdam

not in a class of one’s own: the role of parental resources and social mobility trajectories for entering

gender-atypical educational fields in Finland

irene Prix; Elina Kilpi-Jakonen

University of Turku

Where does class really matter? Social mobility in denmark, the uK and the uS

Anders Holm; Robert Andersen

Western University, London, Ontario

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 19

Session 2.4 (S12) | Migration and integration i: immigrants, refugees and Social Capital

Chair: Sarah Carol

immigrant life situation through the lenses of sending and receiving societies

Irena Kogan; Jing Shen

Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES); University of Mannheim

Social Capital and labor Market integration: a Comparative Study of refugees

and First generation Migrants in germany

yuliya Kosyakova1; Klarita Gërxhani2 1 institute for Employment Research (iAB), Nuremberg; 2 European University Institute (EUI), Florence

religion, social capital and poverty in the uK

yaojun Li1; Anthony Heath2; Tom Woerner-Powell1 1 University of Manchester; 2 Department of Sociology, University of Oxford

the effect of the deferred action for Childhood arrivals on the educational attainment of undocumented

youth: evidence from a large urban public university

Amy Hsin

City University of New york

parallel Sessions 3 | March 30, 16:00-17:45

Session 3.1 (S01) | education iii: networks, peers and Friends

Chair: Martin neugebauer

The Effects of Ethnic Minority Adolescents’ Ethnic Self-Identification on Friendship Selection

Philipp Jugert1; Lars Leszczensky2; Sebastian Pink2 1 University of Leipzig; 2 Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES)

School track and peers’ aspirations on ego’s aspirations to go to college

Maria Gerth

University of Cologne

religion as a bridge or barrier to educational achievements?

Sarah Carol1; Benjamin Schulz2 1 University of Cologne; 2 WZB Berlin Social Science Center

Why Family matters: a gender perspective on the emergence of Social Contacts to natives among Migrants

in germany

Verena Seibel

University of Konstanz

20 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Session 3.2 (S02) | education iv: School-to-Work transitions

Chair: irena Kogan

quality of the transition from education to the labor Market in France: has the direct effect of Social origin

really increased from the 1990s to the 2010s?

Louis-André Vallet1,2; Céline Goffette3,4 1 National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS); 2 Sciences Po, Paris; 3 University Paris-Saclay; 4 Center for Research in

Economics and Statistics (ENSAE-CREST)

The value of foreign certificates in the screening and hiring process: A vignette study among German em-

ployers

Andreas Damelang; Martin Abraham; Sabine Ebensperger; Felix Stumpf

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

do employers adapt their hiring preferences? regional-occupational opportunities in the apprenticeship

market

Paula Protsch1; Christian Gerhards2; Sabine Mohr2 1 WZB Berlin Social Science Center; 2 German Federal institute for Vocational Education and Training (BiBB), Bonn

labor market outcomes for Swedish early school leavers: the role of gender and migrant background

Olav Erik Nygård

Linköping University

Session 3.3 (S11) | Stratification and Mobility III: Social Stratification of Culture

Chair: tak Wing Chan

Migration, Scholarly Culture and abilities: More evidence of an independent and universal book effect

Nate Breznau1; Lisa Sauter1; Zerrin Salikutluk2,3 1 Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES); 2 Humboldt University Berlin; 3 Berlin institute for integration

and Migration Research (BiM)

Super (diluted) Cultural Consumers? Family background and Cultural Consumption practices

Rasmus Henriksen Klokker1; Mads Meier Jæger2 1 The Danish National Centre for Social Research; 2 University of Copenhagen

reading, beaux art and educational attainment in the netherlands: a reconstruction and replication of

earlier evidence

Rick Nijman; Harry B. G. Ganzeboom

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

do elite college students become more interested in highbrow culture? a multilevel growth model of

cultural participation

Suyeong Shin

University of Iowa

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 21

Session 3.4 (S12) | Migration and integration ii: attitudes and Culture

Chair: Steffen hillmert

Cultural influences on the gender division of household labor. Evidence from migrant populations in Europe

Renzo Carriero

University of Turin

public policies, Cultural attitudes and the economic integration of immigrant Women in europe

Agnieszka Kanas; Stephanie Steinmetz

University of Amsterdam

interethnic contact, interethnic competition, and implicit and explicit interethnic attitudes

Lieselotte Blommaert1; Marcel Coenders2; Frank van Tubergen2 1Radboud University; 2Utrecht University

poster Session | March 30, 18:00-21:00

Poster Session (Room HS-A1 and Lecture Hall Building)

pleaSe note: the poster session begins at 18:00 with a joint introduction in room hS-a1

Universal or specific measures for measuring women’s social stratification position

Camilla Catherine Barnett

University of Sterling

a Matter of time? parent’s time in Childcare and Children development

Tomas Cano-Lopez1; Francisco Perales Perez2; Janeen Baxter2 1 Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona; 2 University of Queensland, Brisbane

educational expansion and social mobility in South Korea

Inkwan Chung

yale University

explaining prejudices against refugees in germany: a multilevel analysis

Julia Däumling

University of Cologne

parenthood and depression: is childlessness similar to sonlessness among Chinese seniors?

Maja Djundeva1; Tom Emery1,2; Pearl Dykstra1 1 Erasmus University Rotterdam; 2 Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI)

The Social Stratification of Choice in the Transition to Adulthood

Nicole Hiekel1,3; Francesco C. Billari2; Aart C. Liefbroer3 1 University of Cologne; 2 Nuffield College, University of Oxford; 3 Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI); 4

University of Groningen

do Siblings take the Weight off our Shoulders? the Causal effect of Family Size on the risk of overweight and

obesity during Childhood

Anders Hjorth-Trolle1,2; Joseph John Molitoris2 1 Linköping University; 2 University of Copenhagen

22 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Social segregation in 51 german cities. long-term trends and determinants

Stefanie Jähnen; Marcel Helbig

WZB Berlin Social Science Center

does the cause of parental death matter for children’s education?

Sanni Jalonen-Kotimäki; Sanna Kailaheimo

University of Turku

behind every successful (wo)man is a successful parent-in-law?

Sanna Kailaheimo; Elina Kilpi-Jakonen; Jani Erola; Antti O. Tanskanen

University of Turku

Social origin and personality development in the early life Course

Till Kaiser

WZB Berlin Social Science Center

Does Socio-Economic Status Influence Grip Strength in Older Europeans? Analyzing the Links between Education

and objective health

Judith Kronschnabl

Munich Center for the Economics of Aging (MEA), Max-Planck-institute for Social Law and Social Policy

Women’s reentry into labor market after first childbirth

Jana Mäcken

University of Cologne

employment trajectories of workers in non-standard jobs: More than just traps and stepping stones

Lucille Mattijssen; Dimitris Pavlopoulos

Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Channels of reproduction: parents’ transmission of cultural capital and children’s conversion of cultural capital into

high educational performance

Karoline Mikus1; Nicole Tieben1; Pia Schober2 1 LEAD Graduate School and Research Network, University of Tübingen; 2 University of Tübingen

Cohort Fertility decline and educational attainment: Muslim Women in israel

Barbara S. Okun

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

internet use and Social Contacts: does the Social gradient in internet use exacerbate inequality of Social Con-

tacts?

Patrick Präg1; Lea Ellwardt2; Francesco C. Billari1 1 Nuffield College, University of Oxford; 2 University of Cologne

occupational returns to school drop-out at labor market entry and in the further career: the case of Suriname,

cohorts 1940-1990

Regien Riedewald1,2; Harry B. G. Ganzeboom1 1 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; 2 Anton de Kom University of Suriname

Women’s marital dependence, spousal alternatives and divorce risk in germany

Lisa Schmid; Michael Wagner

University of Cologne

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 23

Social background, education, and adult skills: evidence from piaaC

Silke Schneider

GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Mannheim

Consequences of inequality: relative deprivation and Monetary resources as predictors of individual protest

Christian Straßer; Nasser Agha; Simon Micken

University of Cologne

early labor-market outcomes of high-school dropouts: gender differences during the economic downturn in italy

Emanuela Struffolino; Camilla Borgna

WZB Berlin Social Science Center

the effect of recognition of foreign education for newly arrived immigrants

Andrey Tibajev1; Carina Hellgren2 1 Linköping University; 2 Swedish Council of Higher Education, Stockholm

Culture and Suicide: global attitudes and evidence from immigrants in germany

Daria Tisch

University of Cologne

partner resources and the Scarring effects of unemployment

Leen Vandecasteele1; Martin Ehlert2 1 University of Tübingen; 2 WZB Berlin Social Science Center

unconventional educational pathways and social inequalities in educational attainment: a longitudinal

analysis of labour market opportunities over the career-cycle in germany

Simone Virdia1; Steffen Schindler2

1 University of Trento; 2 University of Bamberg

regeS - refugees in the german educational System: introducing a new panel study on refugees in germany

Jutta von Maurice; Gisela Will; Hans-Günther Roßbach; Christoph Homuth

Leibniz institute for Educational Trajectories (LifBi), Bamberg

investigating local contexts simultaneously: the impact of neighborhood deprivation and local

labor market conditions on young immigrants’ employment prospects

Katarina Weßling1; Christoph Meng2 1 University of Cologne; 2 Research Centre for Education and the Labor Market (ROA), Maastricht University

24 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Friday, March 31, 2017

parallel Sessions 4 | March 31, 09:00-10:45

Session 4.1 (S01) | Family and partnership ii: Family Structure and Child outcomes

Chair: Fabrizio bernardi

nonresident fathers’ involvement and children’s cognitive and educational achievements in the uK

Antti O. Tanskanen; Jani Erola

University of Turku

post-separation families, non-resident fathers, and children’s wellbeing in germany

Thomas Altenhoven; Sandra Krapf

University of Cologne

how does parental divorce impact children’s educational attainment?

Jennie Brand1; Ravaris Moore1; Xi Song2; yu Xie3 1University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA); 2University of Chicago; 3Princeton University

Family dissolution and educational attainment in a cross-country and cross-cohort perspective – a sibling

analysis in the former east and West germany

Wiebke Schulz

Bielefeld University

Session 4.2 (S02) | education v: labor Market opportunities and returns to higher education

Chair: david reimer

Social origins and the decision to leave university in times of economic crisis: The role of the field of study

Loris Vergolini1; Eleonora Vlach2 1 Research institute for the Evaluation of Public Policies (FBK – iRVAPP), Trento; 2 University of Trento

Cognitive Skills and labor Market returns to Field of Study among higher education graduates: evidence

from piaaC

Thijs Bol1; Jan Paul Heisig2 1 University of Amsterdam; 2 WZB Berlin Social Science Center

Socio-economic returns to university education in Japan: estimating the Causal effects of vertical and

Horizontal Stratification in Education

Sho Fujihara; Hiroshi Ishida

University of Tokyo

the effects of the 1999 polish education reform on labor market outcomes

Daniel Horn1,2; Luca Flora Drucker1,3 1 Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Hungarian Academy of Sciences; 2 ELTE Department of Economics, Buda-

pest; 3 Central European University, Budapest

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 25

Session 4.3 (S11) | Stratification and Mobility IV: Multigenerational Inequality

Chair: ineke Maas

demographic transitions, Multigenerational Co-residence, and the intergenerational transmission of inequal-

ity

Xi Song1; Robert Mare2 1 University of Chicago; 2 University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

three-generation associations of educational attainment in europe by family size and gender: results from

Share

Paula Sheppard; Christiaan Monden

University of Oxford

dynastic inequality Compared: Multigenerational Mobility in the uS, the uK, and germany

Guido Neidhöfer; Maximilian Stockhausen

Free University Berlin

Shared lifetime, intergenerational relations and educational attainments in Finland

Antti O. Tanskanen; Hannu Lehti; Jani Erola

University of Turku

Session 4.4 (S12) | health and Wellbeing i: Causes and Consequences of life Satisfaction and Wellbeing

Chair: Karsten hank

Social inequality in Well-being over the life Course

Fabian Kratz; Gerrit Bauer; Josef Brüderl

Ludwig-Maximilians University, Munich

non-standard employment and life Satisfaction in Japan

Jia Wang; James M. Raymo

University of Wisconsin-Madison

Single motherhood and life satisfaction in comparative perspective: do institutional and cultural contexts

explain the life satisfaction penalty for single mothers?

Matthias Pollmann-Schult

Bielefeld University

education and health in the united States and Sweden: a Comparative view on health trajectories in later

life

Liliya Leopold

University of Amsterdam

26 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

plenary Session 2 | March 31, 11:15-12:15

Session P2 (HS-A1) | plenary talk

Chair: Judith offerhaus & Michael Kühhirt

Sociology, Genetics and Stratification: Recent Advances in Fertility Research

Melinda Mills

Nuffield College, University of Oxford

parallel Sessions 5 | March 31, 13:30-15:15

Session 5.1 (S01) | income and Wealth i: housing and homeownership

Chair: Fabian t. pfeffer

a longitudinal analysis of young adults’ entry to the housing system in britain, germany and australia

Rory Coulter1; Philipp Lersch2; Sergi Vidal3; Sait Bayrakdar1 1 University of Cambridge; 2 University of Cologne; 3 University of Queensland, Brisbane

Home ownership as a hidden dimension of stratification and mobility patterns?

Louis Chauvel; Anne Hartung

University of Luxembourg

how does housing affect wellbeing? the moderating effect of homeownership and housing wealth on the rela-

tionship between negative life events and wellbeing

Stéfanie André; Caroline Dewilde; Ruud Muffels

Tilburg University

housing Status as a Multi-dimensional Construct: a test in post-Soviet Contexts

Jane Zavisca1; Hyungjun Suh1; Theodore Gerber2 1 University of Arizona; 2 University of Wisconsin-Madison

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 27

Session 5.2 (S02) | education vi: gender Segregation and inequality in higher education

Chair: andrew penner

Joint Forces: effects of Social background and gender Segregation on higher education in Cross-national

Comparative perspective

Reinhard Pollak1; David Reimer2 1 WZB Berlin Social Science Center; 2 Aarhus University

gender Segregation in higher education: an empirical test of Six explanatory Mechanisms

Carlo S. Barone; Giulia Maria Assirelli

Sciences Po, Paris

a u-turn in college graduation inequality? long term trends in educational mobility in the uSa

Fabrizio Bernardi1; Florian R. Hertel2; Gordey yastrebov1 1 European University Institute (EUI), Florence; 2 University of Hamburg

the gender pay gap among higher education graduates. a closer look on the role of childbearing and

quantile-specific inequalities

Felix Weiss1; Eva Anna-Marie Köhler2,3 1 Aarhus University, Denmark; 2 University of Mannheim; 3 University of Oxford

Session 5.3 (S11) | Stratification and Mobility V: Educational Reproduction and Changes in Mobility

Chair: Moris triventi

educational reproduction in europe: an analysis using Share data

Richard Breen1; John Ermisch2; Satu Helske2 1 Nuffield College, University of Oxford; 2 Department of Sociology, University of Oxford

educational reproduction in germany: a prospective approach based on retrospective data

Jan Skopek1; Thomas Leopold2 1 Trinity College, Dublin; 2 University of Amsterdam

Changes in intergenerational educational mobility. a danish register study

Anders Holm1; Martin Munk2; Dave Harding3; Jens Peter Larsen4 1 Western University, London, Ontario; 2 University of Aalborg; 3 University of California, Berkeley; 4 University of Copen-

hagen

Social inequality in education and the parental context. a large-scale comparative analysis

Steffen Hillmert

University of Tübingen

28 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Session 5.4 (S12) | Family and partnership iii: impact of Family and partnership on employment and earnings

Chair: Marie evertsson

does maternity leave have long term effects on income inequality? a study on 12 european countries

Giulia Maria Dotti Sani; Matteo Luppi

Collegio Carlo Alberto, Turin

partnership status and the wage premium in the u.S., uK, germany, and norway: What explains differentials

between married and cohabiting adults?

Brienna Perelli-Harris1; Fenaba R. Addo2; Stefanie Hoherz1; Trude Lappegard3; Sharon Sassler4 1 University of Southampton; 2 University of Wisconsin-Madison; 3 Statistics Norway; 4 Cornell University

the ‘when’ of gender inequalities: the family wage over the life course and over time

Gabriele Mari

University of Trento

the social integration of single mothers: evidence from east and West germany

Hannah Zagel

Humboldt University, Berlin

parallel Sessions 6 | March 31, 15:45-17:30

Session 6.1 (S01) | income and Wealth ii: income inequality

Chair: Meir yaish

the organizational production of national earnings inequalities

Donald Tomaskovic-Devey; Anthony William Rainey

University of Massachusetts-Amherst

the dynamics of income inequality in comparative perspective

Tak Wing Chan1; John Ermisch2; Rob J. Gruijters2 1 University College London; 2 University of Oxford

the organization of gender inequality: a 12 country comparison of within-job gender inequality

Andrew Penner1; Trond Petersen2; COIN3 1 University of California, Irvine; 2 University of California, Berkeley; 3 COIN

egalitarianism in an era of exploding income inequality: evidence from post-Communist China and austria

Tony Tam1; Jacqueline Chen Chen1; Wang Junxiu2 1 Chinese University of Hong Kong; 2 Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 29

Session 6.2 (S02) | Migration and integration iii: Migration and education

Chair: birgit becker

do mixed unions foster integration? the educational outcomes of mixed-parentage children in italy

Davide Azzolini1; Raffaele Guetto2; Joan Eliel Madia3 1 Research institute for the Evaluation of Public Policies (FBK – iRVAPP), Trento; 2 University of Milan; 3 University of

Oxford

ethnic educational inequality, school segregation, and education systems: evidence from a quasi-longitudi-

nal approach using piSa data

Janna Teltemann1; Reinhard Schunck2 1 University of Hildesheim; 2 GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Cologne

educational trajectories and migration background

Maarten L. Buis; Verena Seibel

University of Konstanz

the value of education and realistic educational aspirations of migrants and non-migrants in four european

countries

Andreas Hadjar; Jan Scharf

University of Luxembourg

Session 6.3 (S11) | Attitudes and Perceptions in Social Stratification Research

Chair: nate breznau

the Social bases of Support for democracy: a Comparative Study of objective and Subjective intergenera-

tional Mobility

Alexi Gugushvili

University of Oxford

equality of opportunity and tolerance toward outcome inequality: evidence from two Survey experiments

Fangqi Wen

New york University

the erosion of political trust: the interaction of unemployment experiences, welfare regimes and the great

recession in europe and the uS

Carlotta Giustozzi; Markus Gangl

Goethe University Frankfurt

30 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Session 6.4 (S12) | labor Market ii: gender inequalities in the labor Market

Chair: reinhard pollak

What an analysis of variation in the ‘partner pay-gap’ tells us about the persistence of income and gendered

inequalities within couples: a comparative analysis

Martina Dieckhoff1; Vanessa Gash2; Antje Mertens3; Laura Romeu-Gordo4 1 WZB Berlin Social Science Center; 2 City University London; 3 Berlin School of Economics and Law; 4 German Center of

Gerontology, Berlin

the transition to parenthood in same-sex and opposite-sex couples. disentangling the importance of gender

and employers’ differential treatment for wage inequality in the Swedish labor market

Katarina Boye; Marie Evertsson

Stockholm University

The ambivalent impact of firm structures on gender inequalities. An empirical analysis with SOEP-LEE data

Anne Busch-Heizmann; Timothy Rinke

University of Duisburg-Essen

educational expansion and changes in earnings inequality among women

Inkwan Chung; Jinwook Chang

yale University

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 31

Saturday, april 01, 2017

parallel Sessions 7 | april 01, 09:30-11:15

Session 7.1 (S01) | income and Wealth iii: Wealth inequality

Chair: philipp lersch

Wealth inequality in a rapidly aging Society: the Case of Japan

Sawako Shirahase

University of Tokyo

beyond Meritocracy. Wealth accumulation in germany

Nora Waitkus; Olaf Groh-Samberg

University of Bremen

Complex union histories and the association between union dissolution and personal wealth. a longitudinal

analysis of australian panel data

Nicole Kapelle; Janeen Baxter; Sergi Vidal; Michele Haynes

University of Queensland, Brisbane

trends in Wealth inequality and insecurity among uS Children

Fabian T. Pfeffer; Robert F. Schoeni; Matthew Gross

University of Michigan

Session 7.2 (S02) | Stratification and Mobility VI: Social Background and Education (O-E)

Chair: ruud luijkx

Social origins, Cognitive ability and educational attainment: unpacking the o–C–e triangle

Mollie Bourne; Erzsébet Bukodi; Bastian Betthäuser; John Goldthorpe

University of Oxford

the nexus between Social background and educational inequalities: do low, Middle

and high achievers differ?

Dennis Köthemann

University of Wuppertal

intergenerational educational Mobility and life Course earnings

Limor Gabay-Egozi1; Meir yaish2 1Bar-ilan University, Tel Aviv; 2University of Haifa

varieties of educational inequality: Class reproduction and meritocracy in the industrial societies

Kwang-yeong Shin; Soo-yeon Moon

Chung-Ang University, Seoul

32 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Session 7.3 (S11) | labor Market iii: gender-(a)typical employment

Chair: Martin ehlert

glass Ceilings, glass escalators and revolving doors: Comparing gendered occupational trajectories

and the upward Mobility of Men and Women in West germany

Lydia Malin1; Ramsey Wise2 1 University of Cologne; 2 Bremen international Graduate School of Social Sciences (BiGSSS)

gender biases in the career structures of Ceos

Benjamin Elbers1; Mathijs de Vaan2; Thomas A. DiPrete1 1 Columbia University, New york; 2 Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley

Wage inequalities between women and men in germany. how relevant are gender-typical job tasks

and the technological change for understanding the gender pay gap?

Anna Erika Hägglund1; Ann-Christin Bächmann2; Corinna Kleinert2 1Leibniz University, Hanover; 2Leibniz institute for Educational Trajectories (LifBi), Bamberg

the Myth of Women’s Work? occupational Segregation and Job Satisfaction

Sandra Buchler1; Michael Dockery2 1Goethe University Frankfurt; 2Curtin University, Perth

Session 7.4 (S12) | health and Wellbeing ii: aging and Mortality

Chair: donald J. treiman

rising educational gradients in Mortality: What are the roles of Marriage Formation and educational as-

sortative Mating?

Wen Fan1; yue Qian2 1 Boston College; 2 University of British Columbia, Vancouver

healthy until death do us part? long-term effects of the marital history on men’s and women’s later life

health in europe

Katja Möhring1; Nadine Reibling2 1University of Mannheim; 2University of Siegen

inequality and mortality in the 20th century: an examination of state-level trends in the united States

Jonathan Latner; Raphael Heiberger

University2 of Bremen

health gap between Chinese rural and urban residents: 1991-2006

yizhang Zhao

University of Manchester

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 33

parallel Sessions 8 | april 01, 11:45-13:30

Session 8.1 (S01) | labor Market iv: Consequences of Job loss and unemployment

Chair: hiroshi ishida

hard times: the great recession and the effect of job loss on household incomes

Timo Lepper; Markus Gangl

Goethe University Frankfurt

the effect of early-career involuntary job loss on late life health in europe

Jonas Voßemer1; Michael Gebel1; Olena Nizalova2; Olga Nikolaieva3; Katerina Gousia2 1 University of Bamberg; 2 University of Kent; 3 Kyiv School of Economics

negative health effects of unemployment. accounting for reverse causality in a dynamic panel regression

analysis

Gerhard Krug1,2; Andreas Eberl2,3 1 University of Erlangen-Nuremberg; 2 institute for Employment Research (iAB), Nuremberg; 3 Leibniz University, Hanover

Spillover effects of unemployment: does becoming unemployed among young people affect health of their

partners?

Anna Baranowska-Rataj; Mattias Strandh

Umeå University

Session 8.2 (S02) | Stratification and Mobility VII: Non-Cognitive Skills in Mobility Research

Chair: Felix Weiss

Integrating personality traits into stratification research

Michael Smith1; Dana Hamplová2; Jonathan Kelley3,4; M. D. R. Evans4 1Czech Academy of Sciences, Economics institute (CERGE-Ei); 2 Czech Academy of Sciences; 3 International Survey Center,

Reno; 4University of Nevada, Reno

The stratification of intergenerational skill transmission: A comparison between the cognitive and the non-

cognitive domain

Volker Lang; Bastian Mönkediek; Martin Diewald

Bielefeld University

Conceptual reanalysis of non-cognitive Skills in Status attainment

Siqi Han

Ohio State University

the evolution of gender inequalities in early Childhood: differences in Cognitive Skills, non-Cognitive Skills,

and parenting

Per Engzell1; Michael Grätz2 1Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm; 2Nuffield College, University of Oxford

34 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Session 8.3 (S11) | labor Market v: applications, training and dualization

Chair: Christian ebner

non-formal Further education and labor Market Mobility in germany

Martin Ehlert1; Christian Ebner2,3 1 WZB Berlin Social Science Center; 2 University of Cologne; 3 German Federal Institute for Vocational Education and

Training (BiBB), Bonn

trends in participation in Work-related education in the united States: 1991-2005

David Bills1; Ryan Wells2; Gregory Wolniak3 1University of Iowa; 2University of Massachusetts-Amherst; 3New york University

the Feedback effect of employment dualization: evidence from german employer-employee

panel data

Fabian Ochsenfeld

Goethe University Frankfurt

the effect of gender-neutral language in job advertisements on the ascription of competence

to male and female applicants: an experiment

Tim Sawert

University of Potsdam

Session 8.4 (S12) | Methods in Social Stratification Research

Chair: yu Xie

no need to turn bayesian in Multilevel analysis with Few Clusters: how Frequentist Methods provide unbi-

ased estimates and accurate inference

Martin Elff1; Jan Paul Heisig2; Merlin Schaeffer3; Susumu Shikano4 1Zeppelin University, Friedrichshafen; 2WZB Berlin Social Science Center; 3University of Cologne; 4University of Konstanz

exploring social class boundaries through a social network analysis of intergenerational

occupational mobility

Vikki Boliver

Durham University

More Necessary and Less Sufficient: An Age-Period-Cohort Approach to Overeducation in Comparative

perspective

Eyal Bar-Haim; Louis Chauvel; Anne Hartung

University of Luxembourg

bringing period and Cohort to the Study of anti-immigrant Sentiment. insights from hierarchical age-

Cohort-periods Model

Anastasia Gorodzeisky; Moshe Semyonov

Tel Aviv University, israel

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 35

plenary Session 3 | april 01, 14:30-15:45

Session P3 (HS-A1) | plenary talk and Farewell

Chair: Judith offerhaus & Marita Jacob

Social mobility among the children of immigrants

Lucinda Platt

Department of Social Policy; London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)

36 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Name SessionNasser Agha PosterMerih AtesStéfanie André 5.1Cansu Atlay 2.2Davide Azzolini 6.2Ann-Christin Bächmann 7.3Douglas E. BaerWilliam Baker 1.2Gabriele Ballarino 2.3Eyal Bar-Haim 8.4Anna Baranowska-Rataj 8.1Katherin Barg 1.2Camilla Catherine Barnett PosterCarlo S. Barone 5.2Sait Bayrakdar 5.1Birgit Becker 1.2Fabrizio Bernardi 1.2; 5.2Bastian Betthäuser 7.2Lieselotte Blommaert 3.4Diederik Boertien 1.3Thijs Bol 4.2Vikki Boliver 8.4Camilla Borgna PosterMilan Bouchet-Valat 1.1Mollie Bourne 7.2Katarina Boye 6.4Jennie Brand 4.1Richard Breen 5.3Valeria Breuker 2.3Nate Breznau 3.3Sandra Buchler 7.3Maarten L. Buis 6.2Erzsébet Bukodi 7.2Anne Busch-Heizmann 6.4Tomas Cano-Lopez PosterSarah Carol 3.1Renzo Carriero 3.4Tak Wing Chan 6.1Louis Chauvel 5.1; 8.4

Jenny Chesters 2.2Seongsoo Choi 2.1Inkwan Chung 6.4; PosterAndreas Damelang 3.2Julia Däumling PosterMartina Dieckhoff 6.4Maja Djundeva PosterGiulia Maria Dotti Sani 5.4Luca Flora Drucker 4.2Christian Ebner 8.3Martin Ehlert 8.3; PosterBenjamin Elbers 7.3Per Engzell 8.2Jani Erola 4.1; 4.3Marie Evertsson 6.4Wen Fan 7.4Sho Fujihara 4.2Markus Gangl 6.3; 8.1Harry B. G. Ganzeboom 3.3; PosterMaria Gerth 3.1Carlotta Giustozzi 6.3Johannes Giesecke 1.4Céline Goffette 3.2John Goldthorpe 7.2Anastasia Gorodzeisky 8.4Michael Grätz 8.2Olaf Groh-Samberg 7.1André Grow 1.1Rob J. Gruijters 6.1Alexi Gugushvili 6.3Andreas Hadjar 6.2Anna Erika Hägglund 7.3Dana Hamplová 8.2Siqi Han 8.2Karsten Hank P1Anne Hartung 5.1; 8.4Jan Paul Heisig 4.2; 8.4Florian R. Hertel 5.2Nicole Hiekel 2.3; PosterSteffen Hillmert 2.2; 5.3

Participants

ISA RC28 (Social Stratification and Mobility), Spring Meeting 2017 37

Anders Hjorth-Trolle PosterAnders Holm 2.3; 5.3Christoph Homuth PosterDaniel Horn 4.2Amy Hsin 2.4Hiroshi Ishida 4.2Marita JacobMads Meier Jæger 3.3Stefanie Jähnen PosterSanna Maria Kailaheimo PosterTill Kaiser PosterAgnieszka Kanas 3.4Nicole Kapelle 7.1Elina Kilpi-Jakonen 2.3Irena Kogan 2.4Eva Anna-Marie Köhler 5.2Siyang Kong 1.3yuliya Kosyakova 2.4Dennis Köthemann 7.2Sandra Krapf 4.1Fabian Kratz 4.4Vered KrausClemens KronebergJudith Kronschnabl PosterGerhard Krug 8.1Michael KühhirtVolker Lang 8.2Jonathan Latner 7.4Thomas Leopold 5.3Liliya Leopold 4.4Timo Lepper 8.1Philipp Lersch 2.1; 5.1Lars Leszczensky 3.1yaojun Li 2.4Kristina Lindemann 1.4Ruud LuijkxIneke Maas 1.3Jana Mäcken PosterJoan Eliel Madia 6.2Lydia Malin 7.3Gabriele Mari 5.4Lucille Mattijssen Poster

Antje Mertens 6.4Simon Micken PosterKaroline Mikus PosterMelinda Mills P2Katja Möhring 7.4Christiaan Monden 2.1; 4.3Bastian Mönkediek 8.2Soo-yeon Moon 7.2Joanne Sophie Muller 2.3Guido Neidhöfer 4.3Martin NeugebauerOlav Erik Nygård 3.2Fabian Ochsenfeld 8.3Judith OfferhausBarbara S. Okun PosterBerkay Özcan 1.1Nazareno Panichella 2.3Dimitris Pavlopoulos PosterAndrew Penner 2.2; 6.1Brienna Perelli-Harris 5.4iñaki Permanyer 1.3Anja Perry 1.4Fabian T. Pfeffer 7.1Lucinda Platt P3Reinhard Pollak 5.2Matthias Pollmann-Schult 4.4Patrick Präg Posterirene Prix 2.3Paula Protsch 3.2Anthony William Rainey 6.1James M. Raymo 4.4Nadine Reibling 7.4David Reimer 5.2Regien Riedewald PosterTimothy Rinke 6.4Daniela Rohrbach-Schmidt 1.4Lisa Sauter 3.3Tim Sawert 8.3Merlin Schaeffer 8.4Jan Scharf 6.2Lisa Schmid PosterSilke Schneider Poster

38 University of Cologne | Faculty of Management, Economics and Social Sciences

Sophia SchneiderWiebke Schulz 4.1Benjamin Schulz 3.1Reinhard Schunck 6.2Verena Seibel 3.1; 6.2Moshe Semyonov 8.4Paula Sheppard 4.3Jiaxin Shi 2.1Suyeong Shin 3.3Kwang-yeong Shin 7.2Sawako Shirahase 7.1Karim Sk 1.2Jan Skopek 5.3Xi Song 1.3; 4.1; 4.3Christian Straßer PosterEmanuela Struffolino PosterHyungjun Suh 5.1Tony Tam 6.1Antti O. Tanskanen 4.1; 4.3Janna Teltemann 6.2Andrey Tibajev PosterNicole Tieben 2.2; Poster

Daria Tisch PosterDonald J. TreimanMoris Triventi 1.2Wout UlteeLouis-André Vallet 3.2Loris Vergolini 4.2Sergi Vidal 5.1; 7.1Simone Virdia PosterEleonora Vlach 4.2Jonas Voßemer 8.1Nora Waitkus 7.1Michael Wagner PosterFelix Weiss 5.2Fangqi Wen 6.3Katarina Weßling PosterJonas Wiedner 1.4Gregory Wolniak 8.3yu Xie 1.3; 4.1Meir yaish 7.2Hannah Zagel 5.4yizhang Zhao 7.4

Central station

CathedralRailway station Deutz

University of applied siences

Koelnmesse / Trade Fair

Rhein / Rhine

Rhei

n / R

hine

Chemical Institute

Physics Institute

library

Auditorium Building

University of Cologne

WiSo-Faculty

University Hospital of Cologne

LANXESS arena

MS loreley

Kreuzblume

Desi

gn: U

lrike

Ker

stin

g | P

hoto

: Zw

eim

alig

GbR

rc28.uni-koeln.de