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Featured researches published by Anja-Kristin Abendroth.


Work, Employment & Society | 2011

Support for the work-life balance in Europe: the impact of state, workplace and family support on work-life balance satisfaction

Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Laura den Dulk

This article studies the relevance of different types of support for satisfaction with work life balance. More specifically, it investigates the relevance of state, instrumental and emotional workplace and family support, based on a survey of 7867 service-sector workers in eight European countries. The article starts by mapping available state, workplace and family support in order to determine which source dominates in which country and whether these sources match Esping-Andersen’s welfare regime typology. The impact of the different support sources is then examined. Findings indicate that support for employee work-life balance satisfaction has a direct and moderating effect. Finally, results show that emotional support and instrumental support in the workplace have a complementary relationship. Whereas emotional family support has a positive impact on work-life balance satisfaction, instrumental family support does not.


American Sociological Review | 2014

The Parity Penalty in Life Course Perspective Motherhood and Occupational Status in 13 European Countries

Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Matt L. Huffman; Judith Treas

Research documents a wage penalty for mothers compared to childless women. We demonstrate there is also an occupational status penalty to motherhood. Interrogating supply- and demand-side explanations of the motherhood penalty from the life course perspective, we formulate and test original hypotheses about the short-term and long-run career implications of parity-specific births. We analyze longitudinal data from the European Community and Household Panel for 13 European countries and eight time points between 1994 and 2001. Our fixed-effects models show that status losses for a first birth are not just short-term but accumulate over the career. The timing of a birth in a woman’s life course matters only for older women, who experience a significant penalty to third births. Although the personal strategies that women use to minimize the career costs of motherhood (e.g., having only one child) prove ineffective, our cross-national evidence shows that public policies are linked to the motherhood penalty in occupational status.


Industrial and Labor Relations Review | 2017

Women at Work

Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Silvia Maja Melzer; Alexandra Kalev; Donald Tomaskovic-Devey

Using a unique sample of 5,022 workers in 94 large German workplaces, the authors explore whether and how women’s access to higher level positions, firms’ human resources practices, and workers’ qualification levels are associated with gender differences in earnings. First, they find that having more women in management reduces the gender earnings gap for jobs with low qualifications, but not those with high qualifications. Second, they find that while men’s compensation is positively affected by having a male supervisor, women with a female supervisor do not receive such an advantage. Finally, they find that human resources practices and job-level qualifications moderate the association between gendered power and gender earnings inequalities. Integrating women into managerial and supervisory roles does not automatically reduce gender inequalities; its impacts are contingent on organizational context.


Lebensbedingungen in Deutschland in der Längsschnittperspektive | 2018

Dynamiken subjektiver Erwerbsprekarität in der späten Erwerbsphase

Katrin Golsch; Anja-Kristin Abendroth

Eine Vielzahl an empirischen Studien hat die zunehmende Bedeutung von prekaren Beschaftigungsverhaltnissen und deren Einfluss auf den individuellen Lebenslauf aufgezeigt. Ein wichtiger Befund dieser Studien ist, dass Prekaritat gesellschaftliche Teilhabebedingungen und -chancen einschrankt. Jedoch wird Prekaritat in quantitativen Untersuchungen bislang kaum multidimensional und im Langsschnitt betrachtet. Auserdem wird haufig das Augenmerk nur auf die erste Erwerbsphase gerichtet. Auch die Frage, ob Prekaritat subjektiv so erlebt wird oder nicht, ist noch nicht ausreichend erforscht.


Community, Work & Family | 2018

German fathers and their preferences for shorter working hours for family reasons

Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Stephanie Pausch

ABSTRACT This study is among the first to analyze fathers’ preference for shorter working hours specifying that the preference is related to the wish to spend more time with the family. Assuming that preferences are context-dependent, this article explores the relevance of the family and workplace context for preference formation. We develop need-based and capability-based arguments to contrast the job demands–resources approach and the capabilities approach in work–family research. Using a sample of 632 fathers from the German LEEP-B3 data with a representative linked employer–employee design for large work organizations we conclude that fathers’ preferences for shorter working hours are indeed context-dependent and that there is more evidence for need-based arguments than opportunity based arguments. Our results indicate that fathers with young children and fathers with high work demands are more likely to desire shorter working hours, whereas a reduction in working hours appears to be unnecessary for fathers who can satisfactorily reconcile work and family life through support from their supervisors. In contrast to capability-based arguments the perception of a highly demanding work culture was not found to decrease but increase the likelihood to desire to work shorter hours.


Social Science Research | 2012

Social support and the working hours of employed mothers in Europe: The relevance of the state, the workplace, and the family

Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Tanja van der Lippe; Ineke Maas


Archive | 2013

What do Women and Men Want? Investigating and Measuring Preference Heterogeneity for Life Outcomes using a Factorial Survey

Reinhard Schunck; Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Martin Diewald; Silvia Maja Melzer; Stephanie Pausch


European Sociological Review | 2013

Human Capital and the Gender Gap in Authority in European Countries

Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Ineke Maas; Tanja van der Lippe


Archive | 2014

Methodological Report Employee and Partner Surveys of the Linked Employer- Employee Panel (LEEP-B3) in Project B3 "Interactions Between Capabilities in Work and Private Life: A Study of Employees in Different Work Organizations"

Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Silvia Maja Melzer; Peter Jacobebbinghaus; Fabienne Schlechter


Schmollers Jahrbuch | 2014

The SFB882-B3 Linked Employer-Employee Panel Survey (LEEP-B3)

Martin Diewald; Reinhard Schunck; Anja-Kristin Abendroth; Silvia Maja Melzer; Stephanie Pausch; Mareike Reimann; Björn Andernach; Peter Jacobebbinghaus

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Peter Jacobebbinghaus

Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung

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Stefan Seth

Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung

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