21 results
Search Results
2. Diverse books for diverse children: Building an early childhood diverse booklist for social and emotional learning.
- Author
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Garces-Bacsal, Rhoda Myra
- Subjects
- *
CULTURE , *CHILD development , *SELF-management (Psychology) , *SELF-consciousness (Awareness) , *BOOKS , *EMOTIONS , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIAL attitudes - Abstract
Research has indicated how diverse books contribute to a more culturally responsive pedagogy, allowing children to identify themselves in the stories they read and gain an appreciation for others whose lives are different from theirs. Moreover, a sensitive discussion of and critical responses to diverse picturebooks is found to positively influence a child's social and emotional learning competecies, apart from increasing a child's cultural knowledge and serving as a catalyst for social justice. This paper is meant to broaden early childhood educators' repertoire of picturebooks that can be used in the classroom to also include international titles (translated into English from their original languages) and multicultural titles to facilitate affective engagement with these narratives and introduce social and emotional learning skills (self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, relationship management and responsible decision-making). This paper provides a list of diverse books (from the Netherlands, Japan, Lithuania, Spain, Germany, France, Argentina – among others) for students in early childhood (from preschool to third grade) thematically organized across the five social and emotional learning competencies. Strategies such as book-bonding and literacy bags for family engagement will be shared while using the framework of culturally responsive teaching in an early childhood setting. Recommendations for how family members can be more involved are included, along with critical literacy strategies that include conversations, multiple perspectives and the sharing of authentic experiences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. How places matter: Telecare technologies and the changing spatial dimensions of healthcare.
- Author
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Oudshoorn, Nelly
- Subjects
TELEMEDICINE ,PLACE (Philosophy) ,MEDICAL technology ,MEDICAL care ,HUMAN geography ,PHYSICIAN-patient relations ,FAMILY relations - Abstract
Dominant discourses on telecare technologies often celebrate the erasure of distance and place. This paper provides a critical intervention into these discourses by investigating how spaces still matter, despite the move from physical to virtual encounters between healthcare professionals and patients. I argue that science and technology studies (STS) research on telecare, as well as other technologies, can be enriched by including a focus on place to understand the dynamic interactions between people and things. Adopting insights of human geographers, I show how places in which technologies are used affect how technologies enable or constrain human actions and identities. Whereas some spaces may facilitate the incorporation of technologies, others may resist technologies. A focus on how places matter is important for understanding how telecare technologies reorder and redefine healthcare. Although other healthcare technologies are also important actors in transforming healthcare, telecare technologies do this in a very specific way: they redefine the spatial dimensions of healthcare. To capture and further explore this changing spatial configuration of healthcare, I introduce the notion of technogeography of care. This concept provides a useful heuristic to study how places matter in healthcare. Although telecare technologies introduce virtual encounters between healthcare providers and patients, the use of telecare devices still largely depends on locally grounded, situated care acts. Based on interviews with users of several cardiac telecare applications, including healthcare professionals and patients in Germany and the Netherlands, the paper shows how patients’ homes and public spaces are important for shaping the implementation and use of telecare technologies, and vice versa. Last, but not least, telecare devices are implicated as well. The paper emphasizes the place-dependency of the use and meaning of technical devices by showing how the same technological device can do and mean different things in different places. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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4. Industrial relations and welfare states: the different dynamics of retrenchment in Germany and the Netherlands.
- Author
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Trampusch, Christine
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL relations ,WELFARE economics ,SOCIAL policy ,EMPLOYEE benefits - Abstract
Proceeding from an historical-analytical reconstruction of the development of collectively negotiated benefits in Germany and the Netherlands, this paper investigates the role and function of industrial relations as a provider and financial supporter of welfare. It argues that social policy based on collective agreements strongly influences contemporary retrenchment policies. Reviewing the literature on retrenchment policies, the paper argues that unions and employers should be regarded as collective actors supporting retrenchment by offering financial and organizational resources to governments in their attempts at welfare delegation. The implication is that the study of comparative welfare retrenchment should move beyond its focus on analysing the political behaviour of the actors involved, to include industrial relations systematically in its frame of reference. Research should take into account patterns of institutionalization of labour relations at company level, traditions of government support for collectively negotiated benefits, and differences in the relative development of public and collectively negotiated benefits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Dutch and German 3-Year-Olds’ Representations of Voicing Alternations.
- Author
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Buckler, Helen and Fikkert, Paula
- Subjects
AUDITORY perception in children ,CAREGIVERS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EYE movements ,LANGUAGE acquisition ,PHONETICS ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICS ,VISUAL perception in children ,DATA analysis ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The voicing contrast is neutralized syllable and word finally in Dutch and German, leading to alternations within the morphological paradigm (e.g., Dutch ‘bed(s)’, be[t]-be[d]en, German ‘dog(s)’, Hun[t]-Hun[d]e). Despite structural similarity, language-specific morphological, phonological and lexical properties impact on the distribution of this alternation in the two languages. Previous acquisition research has focused on one language only, predominantly focusing on children’s production accuracy, concluding that alternations are not acquired until late in the acquisition process in either language. This paper adapts a perceptual method to investigate how voicing alternations are represented in the mental lexicon of Dutch and German 3-year-olds. Sensitivity to mispronunciations of voicing word-medially in plural forms was measured using a visual fixation procedure. Dutch children exhibited evidence of overgeneralizing the voicing alternation, whereas German children consistently preferred the correct pronunciation to mispronunciations. Results indicate that the acquisition of voicing alternations is influenced by language-specific factors beyond the alternation itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The paradox of public health genomics: Definition and diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolaemia in three European countries.
- Author
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Aarden, Erik, Van Hoyweghen, Ine, and Horstman, Klasien
- Subjects
HYPERCHOLESTEREMIA diagnosis ,PUBLIC health ,FAMILIAL diseases ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HYPERCHOLESTEREMIA ,INTERVIEWING ,HEALTH policy ,RECORDS ,PHENOTYPES ,GENETIC testing ,GENOMICS ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Aims: Considerable progress in public health is expected to occur from the application of genomic knowledge and technologies. This is the subject of a newly emerging field of public health genomics. In this paper we analyze differences in how public health genomics is developing in the Netherlands, the UK and Germany through the definition and diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH), an inherited predisposition for coronary heart disease. Methods: We analyzed the emergence of public health genomics within the framework of a project on the incorporation of genetics in western European healthcare schemes. Our analysis is based on document analysis and in-depth interviews. Results: In the Netherlands, public health genomics takes shape through a genetic screening programme for FH, looking for mutations on two specific genes; in the UK it emerges through a strategy of ‘‘mainstreaming’’ genetics in health care that aims to identify hereditary predispositions by means of phenotypic diagnosis; and in Germany public health genomics is elaborated at a conceptual level, leaving a diagnosis of FH to individual physicians who occasionally prescribe genetic testing. Conclusions: Our analysis shows how public health genomics gets constituted differently in different countries and, moreover, produces particular patterns of inclusion and exclusion from care. These patterns indicate a paradox in public health genomics, which consists of an inverse relationship between the use of advanced molecular genetic testing technologies and the number and variety of individuals at risk included in the target population. This paradox presents a challenge for professionals and policy makers in public health genomics. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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7. Administering the Union citizen in need: Between welfare state bureaucracy and migration control.
- Author
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Kramer, Dion and Heindlmaier, Anita
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL relations ,CIVIL rights ,PUBLIC welfare ,CITIZENSHIP ,HEALTH planning - Abstract
How to determine whether mobile Union citizens have a right to social assistance? Research has shown how Western European Member States have made efforts to restrict Union citizens' access to their welfare systems over the past decade, whereby lawful residence has increasingly become the linchpin for entitlement. Member States have responded strikingly differently, however, to the complex administrative puzzle of dealing with open borders, the ability to verify lawful residence and the right to social assistance over time. This article makes an analytical and empirical contribution to existing literature by asking how Member States adjust their welfare/migration administrations to fit the Union's free movement regime and what implications this has for Union citizens. Based upon comparative case studies into the administration of social assistance rights in Germany, Austria and the Netherlands, the article develops a typology of three different models of administering Union citizens' access to the welfare state: the form, signal and delegation models. Demonstrating how bureaucratic design impacts the stratification of social rights in the Member States in different ways, the article concludes that studying alternative administrative models offers important insights into the functioning of territorial welfare states in open border regimes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Liberal feminism and postcolonial difference: Debating headscarves in France, the Netherlands, and Germany.
- Author
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Korteweg, Anna C and Yurdakul, Gökçe
- Subjects
MUSLIMS ,DECOLONIZATION ,FEMINISM ,GENDER ,LEGAL documents ,EUROPEAN history - Abstract
Copyright of Social Compass is the property of Sage Publications, Ltd. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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9. The institutional logic of giving migrants access to social benefits and services.
- Author
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Albrekt Larsen, Christian
- Subjects
CHILD care ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HUMAN rights ,IMMIGRANTS ,UNEMPLOYMENT insurance ,PENSIONS ,PUBLIC opinion ,PUBLIC welfare ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL security ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
The article analyses how the programmatic structure of welfare schemes in Denmark, the Netherlands and Germany shape public perceptions of and preferences for migrants' entitlement to social benefits and services. First, the article finds that despite high complexity and the presence of some severe misconceptions, the entitlement criteria of migrants within existing social benefits and services do shape public perceptions of reality. Second, the article finds that these institutional shaped perceptions of reality strongly influence preferences for how migrants' entitlement criteria should be. This status quo effect is more moderate among populist right-wing voters, in general, and in the critical case of attitudes to non-EU migrants' entitlement to social assistance in Denmark. However, in all segments, one finds strong correlations between 'are' and 'should be', which is taken as indications of clear and sizeable institutional effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Immigration policy and the modern welfare state, 1880–1920.
- Author
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Kalm, Sara and Lindvall, Johannes
- Subjects
HISTORY of emigration & immigration ,IMMIGRATION law ,CITIZENSHIP ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HISTORICAL research ,HUMAN rights ,INSURANCE ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,POLICY science research ,PRACTICAL politics ,PUBLIC welfare ,REFUGEES ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL security ,GOVERNMENT policy ,GOVERNMENT regulation - Abstract
This article puts contemporary debates about the relationship between immigration policy and the welfare state in historical perspective. Relying on new historical data, the article examines the relationship between immigration policy and social policy in Western Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when the modern welfare state emerged. Germany already had comparably strict immigration policies when the German Empire introduced the world's first national social insurances in the 1880s. Denmark, another early social-policy adopter, also pursued restrictive immigration policies early on. Almost all other countries in Western Europe started out with more liberal immigration policies than Germany's and Denmark's, but then adopted more restrictive immigration policies and more generous social policies concurrently. There are two exceptions, Belgium and Italy, which are discussed in the article. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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11. Three-Verb Clusters in Interference Frisian: A Stochastic Model over Sequential Syntactic Input.
- Author
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Hoekstra, Eric and Versloot, Arjen
- Subjects
FORECASTING ,COMPARATIVE grammar ,HIGH school students ,LINGUISTICS ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MATHEMATICS ,PROBABILITY theory ,SPEECH evaluation ,STATISTICAL hypothesis testing ,STATISTICS ,THEORY ,DATA analysis ,SECONDARY analysis ,PHONOLOGICAL awareness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Interference Frisian (IF) is a variety of Frisian, spoken by mostly younger speakers, which is heavily influenced by Dutch. IF exhibits all six logically possible word orders in a cluster of three verbs. This phenomenon has been researched by Koeneman and Postma (2006), who argue for a parameter theory, which leaves frequency differences between various orders unexplained. Rejecting Koeneman and Postma’s parameter theory, but accepting their conclusion that Dutch (and Frisian) data are input for the grammar of IF, we will argue that the word order preferences of speakers of IF are determined by frequency and similarity. More specifically, three-verb clusters in IF are sensitive to: their linear left-to-right similarity to two-verb clusters and three-verb clusters in Frisian and in Dutch; the (estimated) frequency of two- and three-verb clusters in Frisian and Dutch. The model will be shown to work best if Dutch and Frisian, and two- and three-verb clusters, have equal impact factors. If different impact factors are taken, the model’s predictions do not change substantially, testifying to its robustness. This analysis is in line with recent ideas that the sequential nature of human speech is more important to syntactic processes than commonly assumed, and that less burden need be put on the hierarchical dimension of syntactic structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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12. Wage and workforce adjustments in the economic crisis in Germany and the Netherlands.
- Author
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Tijdens, Kea, van Klaveren, Maarten, Bispinck, Reinhard, Dribbusch, Heiner, and Öz, Fikret
- Subjects
COLLECTIVE labor agreements ,COMPENSATION management ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,FINANCIAL crises ,ORGANIZATIONAL aims & objectives - Abstract
This study uses data from a continuous employee web-survey to investigate the trade-off between wage and workforce adjustments and the role of industrial relations in firm-level responses to the economic crisis in Germany and the Netherlands. Workforce adjustments seemed to be a continuous organizational strategy, but wage adjustments were less often reported. We found no large-scale evidence of wage concessions being traded-off for job protection in the two countries. Collective bargaining ensured that wage-setting was more robust than employment protection: employees covered by collective agreements reported workforce adjustments more often than wage adjustments. Low-educated and low-wage employees reported basic wage reductions more often: the economic crisis increased wage inequality. Labour hoarding was reported predominantly by young, male employees with a permanent, full-time contract. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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13. The European Employment Strategy and National Core Executives: Impacts on activation reforms in the Netherlands and Germany.
- Author
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Stiller, Sabina and van Gerven, Minna
- Subjects
HYPOTHESIS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,EMPLOYMENT ,INTERVIEWING ,LABOR market ,CASE studies ,POLICY sciences ,SOCIAL security ,STRATEGIC planning ,KNOWLEDGE management ,SOCIAL context - Abstract
The European Employment Strategy (EES) has opened up new dynamics of Europeanization in the area of social policy. This article proposes to pay more attention to national core executives and their strategic use of the EES when considering its impact. Through core executives, the EES may not only affect domestic policy agendas, but also decision-making on reform. A comparative case study of activating employment policy reforms in the Netherlands and Germany evaluates expectations about how these agents upload and download ideas to and from the EU level. The findings indicate that uploading is facilitated by holding the EU presidency and a good fit with EES prescriptions, while downloading does not seem to depend on prior uploading and degree of fit but on other domestic factors. True strategic use of the EES by core executives following a sequence of uploading and downloading appears to be contingent on several contextual factors. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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14. The Evaluation of Popular Music in the United States, Germany and the Netherlands: A Comparison of the Use of High Art and Popular Aesthetic Criteria.
- Author
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van Venrooij, Alex and Schmutz, Vaughn
- Subjects
MUSICAL criticism ,POPULAR music ,MUSIC critics - Abstract
Popular music has apparently gained much in status and artistic legitimacy. Some have argued that popular music criticism has assimilated the evaluative criteria traditionally associated with high art aesthetics to legitimate pop music as a serious art form, while others have claimed that popular music discourse opposes the evaluative principles of high art worlds in favor of a ‘popular aesthetic’. Drawing on the theoretical framework of Lamont, DiMaggio and Bourdieu, we compare the critical discourse on popular music in the United States, Germany and the Netherlands and expect that the presence of ‘high art’ and ‘popular’ aesthetic criteria in popular music reviews published in elite newspapers varies cross-nationally due to differences in the hierarchy, universality and boundary strength of their respective cultural classification systems. We compare the prevalence of various high art and popular evaluative criteria in popular music album reviews in American, Dutch, and German newspapers. In the US, the boundary between high art and popular aesthetics appears to be weakest, German reviewers take the most high art approach to popular music, while Dutch reviews clearly favor the popular aesthetic over high art criteria. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The ‘Clean Wehrmacht’ in the German-occupied Netherlands, 1940-5.
- Author
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Foray, Jennifer L.
- Subjects
HOLOCAUST, 1939-1945 ,MILITARY occupation ,WORLD War II ,NAZI persecution ,NAZI Germany, 1933-1945 ,PERSECUTION of Jews ,GERMAN occupation of Netherlands, 1940-1945 - Abstract
Typically, discussions of a purportedly ‘clean Wehrmacht’ — and its counterpart, the ‘barbarization of warfare’ concept — have centered upon developments in wartime Poland and the western reaches of the Soviet Union. However, the situation in Western Europe merits further analysis, if only because the notion of an apolitical, upright Wehrmacht existed in the Netherlands, too. Drawing upon situation reports generated by the Netherlands’ military occupiers, this article examines both the Wehrmacht’s attempts to avoid the ideological excesses of its civilian counterparts and the progressive deterioration of the army’s situation in this western corner of the nazi New Order. Ultimately, mounting physical privations, growing popular hostility, and the nazi regime’s demand for co-operation in enforcing anti-Jewish measures would undo the military’s attempt to remain out of the fray of politics. As in Eastern Europe, the idea of a ‘clean Wehrmacht’ in the Netherlands would prove more myth than reality. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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16. Childbirth and cohort effects on mothers' labour supply: a comparative study using life history data for Germany, the Netherlands and Great Britain.
- Author
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Fouarge, Didier, Manzoni, Anna, Muffels, Ruud, and Luijkx, Ruud
- Subjects
LABOR market research ,CHILDBIRTH ,EMPLOYMENT of mothers ,MOTHERHOOD - Abstract
The negative effect of childbirth on mothers' labour supply is well documented, though most studies examine only the short-term effects. This study uses retrospective life history data for Germany, the Netherlands and Great Britain to investigate the long-term effects of childbirth on mothers' labour supply for successive birth cohorts. Probit estimates with correction for selection into motherhood and the number of births show strong drops in participation before first childbirths and strong recovery after the birth of the last child, especially in Great Britain. Younger cohorts display a less sharp decline in participation around childbirth and a faster increase in participation in the 20 years after childbirth, especially in the Netherlands. However, mothers' participation rates do not return to pre-birth levels in any of the countries studied here. Labour market conditions and institutional public support seem to contribute to explaining the cross-country variation in participation after childbirth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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17. Determinants of job insecurity in five European countries.
- Author
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de Bustillo, Rafael Muñoz and de Pedraza, Pablo
- Subjects
JOB security ,LABOR market ,WOMEN'S employment ,WAGES ,CONTRACTS - Abstract
This article studies the determinants of subjective job insecurity in five European countries (Belgium, Finland, Germany, Spain and The Netherlands), using data from the WageIndicator web survey. The impact of different variables is estimated using logistic regression. The analysis shows that differences in subjective job insecurity of women are explained by their objective situation in the labour market. In contrast, subjective insecurity increases with age; education reduces job insecurity, as do wages, except at very high wage levels; having a temporary — but not — a part-time — contract contributes to insecurity, which points to the different nature of the two types of contract. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Choice of public or private health insurance: learning from the experience of Germany and the Netherlands.
- Author
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Thomson, Sarah and Mossialos, Elias
- Subjects
HEALTH insurance ,MEDICAL care ,INSURANCE companies - Abstract
Several European countries have considered introducing choice of public or private health insurance — usually by allowing people to 'opt out' of the statutory scheme — under the assumption that enhancing consumer choice and stimulating competition between insurers will be beneficial. This article examines the impact of opting out on equity and efficiency in European health systems. Focusing on Germany and the Netherlands — the only European countries where this type of choice has been available to significant population groups for a prolonged period (from 1970 to the present day in Germany, and from 1941 to 1986 in the Netherlands) — the analysis suggests that current policy debates may overstate the potential benefits of opting out. Due to market failures in health insurance and differences in the regulatory frameworks governing public and private insurers, choice of public or private coverage creates strong incentives for private insurers to select risks and leads to risk segmentation, thereby breaching equity in funding health care, heightening the financial risk borne by public insurers and lowering incentives for private insurers to operate efficiently. Measures can be taken to correct these negative effects, but some forms of regulation may be politically and technically difficult to implement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The Relationship between Financial Participation and Other Forms of Employee Participation: New Survey Evidence from Europe.
- Author
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Poutsma, Erik, Kalmi, Panu, and Pendleton, Andrew D.
- Subjects
BUSINESS enterprises ,FINANCIAL statements ,CORPORATE growth ,ECONOMICS ,PROFIT-sharing - Abstract
This article explores the relationships between financial participation and other forms of participation drawing on data collected from listed companies in Finland, Germany, the Netherlands and the UK. The authors provide evidence on two questions. First, does the presence of either direct or indirect participation predict the use of profit sharing and employee equity plans? Second, to what extent is employee participation in profit sharing and equity plans influenced by the presence of other forms of participation? Overall, the results provide little evidence of complementarity between financial participation and other forms of participation. There are also clear differences between types of financial participation. It is found that indirect participation has a weak relationship with use of profit sharing and participation in profit sharing plans. Direct participation is not associated with the use of equity plans or profit sharing but with participation in stock acquisition plans. Employee participation in plan design is strongly associated with participation in profit sharing and stock acquisition plans but not stock options. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Changing dynamics in female employment around childbirth: evidence from Germany, the Netherlands and the UK.
- Author
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Vlasblom, Jan Dirk and Schippers, Joop
- Subjects
WOMEN'S employment ,LABOR mobility ,EMPLOYMENT changes ,LABOR supply ,FAMILY policy ,EMPLOYMENT forecasting ,FAMILY studies - Abstract
There is a strong effect of childbirth on female labour supply. This effect, however, is changing over time. This article uses panel data on the last two decades on three European countries (the Netherlands, Germany, the UK) to study changes in female labour force behaviour around childbirth and tries to find an explanation for these changes by looking at differences between the three countries. We conclude that there are substantial differences in participation patterns between the three countries in our study and that policy measures and institutions such as childcare that make the costs of combining work and family lower relative to being a full-time mother seem to increase female participation rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A difficult relationship of unequal relatives: The Dutch NSB and Nazi Germany, 1933-1940.
- Author
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Orlow, Dietrich
- Subjects
FASCISM ,NATIONAL socialism ,POLITICAL parties - Abstract
Assesses the relationship of European fascism embodied in the Dutch Nationaal Socialistische Beweging (NSB) party and Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1940. Perceptions of the NSB on Italian and German fascism; Leadership of Adriaan Anton Mussert; Parallelism of NSB and the German Nazi party; Institutions and programs copied by the NSB from the German Nazi party.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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