2 research outputs found

    Collateral Damage: Educational Attainment and Labor Market Outcomes Among German War and Post-War Cohorts

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    We use data from the West German 1970 census to explore the link between being born during or shortly after World War II and educational and labor market outcomes 25 years later. We document, for the first time, that men and women born in the relatively short period between November 1945 and May 1946 have significantly and substantially lower educational attainment and occupational status than cohorts born shortly before or after. Several alternative explanations for this new finding are put to test. Most likely, a short but severe spell of quantitative and qualitative malnutrition immediately around the end of the war has impaired intrauterine conditions in first trimester pregnancies and resulted in longterm detriments among the affected cohorts. This conjecture is corroborated by evidence from Austria

    The final stage : a comparative study of the transition from communist rule to democratic government in Poland and Czechoslovakia

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    Defence date: 5 November 2004Examining board: Prof. Arfon Rees (European University Institute) - supervisor ; Prof. Laszlo Brustz (European University Institute) ; Prof. George Kolankiewicz (School of Slavonic and East Europen Studies, London) ; Prof. Geoffrey Robert Swain (University of the West England, Bristol)PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 201
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