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Impact of Basic Human Values on Alcohol Use as a Coping Strategy During Chronic Stress Tovább olvasom

Bakucs Zoltán, Benedek Zsófia, Fertő Imre és Fogarasi József tanulmánya Tovább olvasom

From fork to farm, locally: social acceptance pathways for human excreta-derived fertilisers across three European regions - Varjú Viktor cikke Tovább olvasom

Megjelent a Socio-Ecological Practice Research folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

The Kitchen-Work of Collaborative Research: Recipes for Transformative Methodologies - Bródy Luca Sára és szerzőtársai cikke megjelent az Antipode folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

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Who is still in line? How bank beliefs drive fragility under runs - Csóka Péter és Kiss Hubert János cikke megjelent a Finance Research Letters folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

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Dynamics of two-sided platforms in public administration - Somogyi Róbert és szerzőtársai cikke megjelent az Operational Research folyóiratban Tovább olvasom

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Budapest így kerüli meg a kormányt a nemzetközi színtéren - Brucker Balázs írása a KRTK blogban a Portfolion Tovább olvasom

Tovább olvasom

KTI Szeminárium: Julia Leesch (Trinity College, Dublin) – Decomposing Trends in Educational Homogamy and Heterogamy – The Case of Ireland

 

KTI Szeminárium: Julia Leesch (Trinity College, Dublin) – Decomposing Trends in Educational Homogamy and Heterogamy – The Case of Ireland

Abstract:

Employing Irish Census microdata, we analyze trends in educational homogamy and heterogamy between 1991 and 2016 and examine how they can be explained by concurrent trends in three theoretically relevant socio-demographic components – (a) educational attainment, (b) the educational gradient in marriage, and (c) educational assortative mating (i.e., non-random matching). Our study proposes a novel counterfactual decomposition method to estimate the contribution of each component to changing sorting outcomes in marriages. Findings indicate rising educational homogamy, an increase in non-traditional unions in which women partner ‘down’ in education and a decline in traditional unions. Decomposition results suggest that those trends are predominantly attributable to changes in women’s and men’s educational attainment. Furthermore, changes in the educational gradient in marrying contributed to rising homogamy and the decline in traditional unions, a largely overlooked fact in previous research. Although educational assortative mating has been changing, those changes hardly shaped trends in sorting outcomes.

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