3. Juni 2020

Prejudices against the unemployed – empirical evidence from Germany

Prejudices against the unemployed pose an enormous threat to their self-confidence and can make it difficult for them to re-enter the labour market, resulting in further long-term unemployment. Given these high costs for the unemployed and for society as a whole, our knowledge of prejudices against the unemployed is surprisingly scarce. We focus on the question of what determines the strength of prejudice among employees. By applying social identity theory, we assume that people who are disadvantaged in the labour market in general, also hold stronger prejudices. In addition, we assume that social status mediates this association and that self-efficacy moderates it. (...)
29. November 2019

Explaining the Stigma Consciousness of the Unemployed

This article examines how the stigma consciousness of the unemployed can be explained. Based on the Labeling Approach, we define unemployment as a status which is deviant from the norm of employment. Following arguments of gender theory, we model a moderating effect of gender regarding both the employment norm and informal social control. (...)
31. Dezember 2018

Stigma Consciousness among Unemployed Individuals: An Analysis Using a Mixed Method Design

This article addresses the question what factors have an impact on specific dimensions of being conscious of the stigma referring to being unemployed (awareness, denial, disaffiliation). We use a Mixed Methods Design which sequentially combines qualitative and quantitative methods. On a theoretical level, Goffman's stigma concept is used as a sensitizing concept to derive the hypotheses from the qualitative interview material. The hypotheses are tested using data from the German panel study ‘Labour Market and Social Security’. (...)