Publicaties
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Frames of reference for comparison of three immigrant groups in Belgium: the case of Turkish, North African and Eastern European immigrants Universiteit Gent
Partner choice and marriage among immigrants: the integration process of migrants in the port-city of Antwerp from a life course perspective 1846-1920 Universiteit Gent
Partner choice and marriage among immigrants: the integration process of migrants in the port-city of Antwerp from a life course perspective 1846-1920 Universiteit Gent
Immigrants' Attitudes towards Welfare Redistribution. An Exploration of Role of Government Preferences among Immigrants and Natives across 18 European Welfare States KU Leuven
© 2015 The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. An oft-heard concern about the sustainability of the welfare state is that generous social welfare provisions serve as an important pull factor in immigrants' consideration of their preferred country of destination. With their accumulated social risks, immigrants are averagely more likely to claim welfare benefits, suggesting that generous provisions reinforce ...
Do attitudes towards the integration of immigrants change over time? A comparative study of natives, second-generation immigrants and foreign-born residents in Luxembourg KU Leuven
The aim of this paper is to investigate attitudes toward the integration of immigrants in Luxembourg-the country with the highest proportion of immigrants in Europe. First, the paper examines how attitudes toward integration (consisting of two dimensions: attitudes toward assimilation and attitudes toward multiculturalism) vary among different groups of the country's residents, i.e. natives and residents with a migratory background. Second, it ...
Civic knowledge and tolerance toward immigrants in Europe: How similar is the relationship between young people’s civic knowledge and attitudes toward equal rights for immigrants, across European countries? KU Leuven
Tolerance is necessary for the functioning of mature democracies where social cohesion is strong. Results from IEA’s International Civic and Citizenship Education Study (ICCS) 2016 show that, on average, European young people tend to be tolerant, but their attitudes towards equal rights for immigrants vary widely within and across European educational systems. In each of the ICCS 2016 European educational systems, young people with higher levels ...