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What determines subjective socio-economic insecurity?: Context and class in comparative perspective
Department of Sociology, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany.
Department of Sociology, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-4974-2956
Department of Sociology, University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany.
2012 (English)In: Socio-Economic Review, ISSN 1475-1461, E-ISSN 1475-147X, Vol. 10, no 4, p. 655-682Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The phenomenon of socio-economic insecurity is widely discussed in contemporary public and academic discourse. However, it is unclear how objective socio-economic and institutional conditions affect subjective feelings of insecurity. Based on a review of the relevant literature, we hypothesize that objective contextual factors of labour market characteristics, levels of social protection and levels of internationalization and globalization exacerbate or mitigate subjective feelings of insecurity. We derive and test specific hypotheses using data from the fourth round of the European Social Survey (fielded 2008/2009). Based on our multilevel analysis of 18 412 individuals in 19 countries, we find that socio-economic (GDP) and institutional (welfare state effort) factors are relevant to subjective socio-economic insecurity, whereas the degree of internationalization (economic globalization, share of foreign-born population) plays a surprisingly negligible role. Moreover, significant cross-level interactions among social class and income inequality, unemployment, labour market regulation and economic globalization indicate that these country-level factors have a class-specific impact.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Oxford: Oxford University Press , 2012. Vol. 10, no 4, p. 655-682
Keywords [en]
socio-economic insecurity, globalization, labor market protection, social security, C31 cross-sectional models, spatial models, treatment effect models, quantile regressions, social interaction models, I30 welfare and poverty general, Z13 economic sociology, economic anthropology, social and economic stratification
National Category
Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-44068DOI: 10.1093/ser/mws001ISI: 000309131200003Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-84866757360OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-44068DiVA, id: diva2:800613
Available from: 2012-05-04 Created: 2015-04-07 Last updated: 2017-12-04Bibliographically approved

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Mewes, Jan

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