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Peters-Olbrich, Florian: Integration of Immigrants in Germany : Economic Relevance, Measurement, and Empirical Findings. 2019
Inhalt
diss-titelblatt-peters-olbrich
diss_Peters-Olbrich_buchblock_2019-10-04
titelei_wwu-schriften_peters-olbrich
diss_Peters-Olbrich-2019-10-04
1 Introduction
2 Definitions
2.1 (Im)migration and (Im)migrants
2.2 Assimilation, Integration and other Concepts of Cohabitation
3 Economic Relevance of Integration
3.1 Relationship of Immigration, Diversity and Integration
3.2 Basic Economic Effects of Immigration
3.2.1 Theoretical Analysis
3.2.2 Summary of Empirical Analysis
3.3 Economic Effects of Diversity and the Necessity of Integration
3.3.1 Why is Integration Important?
3.3.2 Positive Effects of Diversity in an Integrated Society
3.3.3 Negative Effects of Diversity without Integration
3.4 Fiscal Effects of Immigration and Integration
4 Migration History of Germany
18th and 19th century
The early 20th century and World War I
Nazi-Reign and World War II
Post-War Era
Post-Cold War Era
Recent Developments
5 Empirical Literature about Integration
5.1 Measuring Integration with International Data
5.2 Measuring Assimilation with German Data
5.3 Contributions and Limits of this Integration Measurement for Germany
6 Technical Remarks and Implementation of the Model
6.1 Description of Data and Variables
6.1.1 Survey of the German Microcensus
6.1.2 Immigrants within the German Microcensus
6.1.3 Important Regions of Origin and their Differentiation in the Microcensus
6.1.4 Selection of Material Explanatory Variables
Labour Force Participation
Earned Income
Ranking of Occupation
Self-Employment
Dependence on Social Assistance
Home Ownership
Square meters of living space
Living in a big city with more than 500.000 inhabitants
Civic Engagement
Married to a Migrant
Number of children in the same household
Marital Status
Highest Educational or Professional Degree
6.2 Model Description
6.2.1 The Probit Model to Predict Immigrant Status
6.2.2 Immigrants as “Rare Events” in the Data
6.2.3 Three Different Model Specifications
6.3 Additional Methodical remarks
6.3.1 Repeated Cross-sectional Data and Selective Remigration
6.3.2 Systematic Differences between Females and Males
6.3.3 Test for Multicollinearity
7 Integration Index Results and Interpretation
7.1 What determines Integration Success? Five Hypotheses
The Cultural Distance Hypothesis (H1)
The Group Size Hypothesis (H2)
Self-Selection Hypothesis (H3)
The Time Horizon Hypothesis (H4)
The Triangle Hypothesis (H5)
7.2 Cross-Sectional Results in 2010
7.2.1 State of Integration for 2010
7.2.2 Interpretation of Marginal Effects
7.2.3 The Duality of Economic and Socio-cultural Integration
7.3 Repeated Cross-Sectional Analysis
7.3.1 Development of Integration from 2007 to 2012
7.3.2 Development of Integration from 1996 to 2012
7.3.3 Marginal Effects at Different Points in Time
7.4 Comparing the First and Second Immigrant Generation
7.5 Interpretation and Discussion of Results
“Guest Workers” (Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain)
Northern/Western Europe
Central and South East/East Europe
Turkey
Africa without North Africa
North Africa
South America
USA
Near/Middle East, Central Asia
(Late)-Repatriates and Ethnic Germans
7.6 Political Implications
Initial Cultural Distance
Group Size
Self-Selection
Time Horizon
Attitude Towards Immigration
8 Conclusion
9 Publication Bibliography
10 Attachments
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