Conference Agenda
Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).
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Session Overview |
Date: Tuesday, 09/July/2024 | ||||
9:30am - 11:00am |
Attitudes towards economic redistribution, inequality and fairness I Location: C406, Floor 4 Chair: Javier Olivera Individual Experience Matters: How the Persistence of Personal Experience of Long-term Unemployment Impacts Support for Income Redistribution in Europe Institute of Sociology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic It’s the Middle that Matters? Income Class Coalitions in Support of Redistributive Welfare Reform Tilburg University, the Netherlands Perceived income inequality, perceived unfairness and subjective social status in Europe HUN-REN Centre for Social Sciences, Hungary Preferences for redistribution and wealth inequality around the world 1: National Bank of Belgium; 2: Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research; 3: University of Verona |
Digital social contacts in work and family life I Location: C301, Floor 3 Chair: Anja-Kristin Abendroth Chair: Judith Treas Changes in social exclusion in times of COVID-19: evidence from the European Social Survey CSG, ISEG, Universidade de Lisboa Conflicting effects of remote work and managerial digital communication on the work-family balance in Europe. UC3M, Spain Digital Boundary Work: Digital Technologies and Work-to-Family Spillover in Europe University of California, Irvine, United States of America Digital Inequalities: A Sociodemographic Analysis of Internet Non-Users in Portugal (2003-2022) 1: CIES-Iscte, Portugal; 2: CECS-UMinho, Portugal Disentangling substitution and cumulation effects of digital and traditional contacts between children and older European parents 1: University of Florence, Italy; 2: University of Padua, Italy |
Explaining attitudes toward immigrants III Location: C104, Floor 1 Chair: Eldad Davidov Chair: Oshrat Hochman Chair: Vera Messing Chair: Alice Ramos Does Trust in National and European Institutions Differently Impacts Perception Towards Immigrants? Comparative Analyses Between Eastern and Western Europe University of Bucharest, Romania, Romania Losing empathy with assimilation: Immigrants’ attitudes toward the immigrant population University of Milan, Italy Media consumption habits and immigration attitudes in Hungary and Germany over two decades HUN-REN Center for Social Sciences, Hungary What goes around, comes around: Attitudes of persons with a migration history towards immigrants 1: GESIS Leibniz Institut für Sozialwissenschaften, Germany; 2: Instituto de Ciências Sociais- Univ. Lisboa |
Generating new insights from the CROss-National Online Survey 2 (CRONOS-2) panel IV Location: C201, Floor 2 Chair: Gianmaria Bottoni Chair: Rory Fitzgerald The impact of data collection mode on attitudes toward life and death: EVS and CRONOS2 Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal The role of individual-level financial ostracism on country-level economic satisfaction University of Basel, Switzerland, Switzerland Trust in social surveys and web panel retention rate – Cronso2 case in cross-national comparison UL FDV (SI47607807), Slovenia Who Deserves to Vote? Examining Citizen Attitudes Toward Migrant Voting Rights in Belgium 1: Autonomous University of Barcelona; 2: Catholic University of Louvain; 3: Waseda University; 4: Catholic University of Lille |
How Europeans view and evaluate democracy, a decade later I Location: B103, Floor 1 Chair: Mónica Ferrín Chair: Pedro Magalhaes A parallel-run experiment: the impact of data collection mode on data City, University of London, United Kingdom Assessing the dimensionality of regime support in cross-national and time comparing perspective 1: GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany; 2: Institute for Political Science, University of Marburg, Germany; 3: Center for International Development and Environmental Research, University of Giessen, Germany Cheap Talking Democrats? Unmasking the Sincerity of Survey Measures of Democratic Attitudes 1: Aarhus University, Denmark; 2: University of Lisbon, Portugal |
More than a decade of research into switching general population surveys from interviewer-based to self-completion modes I Location: C401, Floor 4 Chair: Michèle Ernst Stähli Chair: Michael Ochsner A Comparison of Non-Response Patterns over Time in Countries that Switched to Self-Completion at Round 10 University of Essex, United Kingdom Effect of incentives in Face-to Face and Self-Completion surveys on response rates and sample composition. The case of Switzerland FORS, Switzerland Experimental evidence for effects of a mode-switch from interviewer-based to self-completion: Effects on time-series and item-nonresponse FORS, Switzerland Investigating the role of data collection mode in the nonresponse and measurement error nexus University of Lausanne, Switzerland |
Social and political trust in comparative context I Location: C103, Floor 1 Chair: Sandy Marquart-Pyatt Chair: Aaron Ponce A Dark Side to Social Trust? Explaining the Relationship between Social Trust and Accepting Conspiracy Beliefs Tilburg University, Netherlands, The Government-Party Evaluations and The Cost of Governing for Far-Right Parties Florida State University, United States of America Tracing the Origin of the “Winner–Loser Gap” – A Temporal Analysis of how Election Outcomes Impact Winners’ and Losers’ Satisfaction with Democracy Stockholm University, Sweden Trust Towards Unknown Others and its Measurement HUN-REN CERS, Hungary |
What is hidden behind the curtain of value orientations: the study of lives across nations and over time Location: C402, Floor 4 Chair: Aurelija Stelmokiene How Do the Elements of Schwartz’s Cultural Model Relate to Other Cultural Models? Evidence from the ESS University of Tartu, Estonia Investigating the Links Between Values and Beliefs in COVID-19 Conspiracy Theories Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania Latent Profile Analysis of Schwartz Value Scales: between “stable” and “changing” Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania What Explains Country-Level Differences in Political Belief System Coherence? UNC Chapel Hill, USA |
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11:00am - 11:30am |
Coffee break Location: Foyer, Floor 1 |
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11:30am - 12:30pm |
Keynote II | A cross-national survey transformation: the move to self-completion interviewing on Europe’s flagship cross-national general social survey - Professor Rory Fitzgerald (European Social Survey Director) Location: Grande Auditório, Floor 1 Followed by a panel discussion with Professor Eldad Davidov (University of Cologne and University of Zurich), Tim Hanson (City, University of London and ESS), Professor Caroline Roberts (University of Lausanne and FORS - Swiss Centre of Expertise in the Social Sciences) and Ineke Stoop (formerly SCP - The Netherlands Institute for Social Research) |
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12:30pm - 1:30pm |
Lunch break Location: Foyer, Floor 1 |
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1:30pm - 3:00pm |
Attitudes towards economic redistribution, inequality and fairness II Location: C406, Floor 4 Chair: Javier Olivera Preferences for Redistribution: The Impact of Government Intervention Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Welfare Chauvinism and Family Policy: Attitudinal Drivers of Child Benefit Generosity by Birth Order in Europe University of Oxford, United Kingdom What influences judgements about the fairness of income? Sciences Po, France |
Digital social contacts in work and family life II Location: C301, Floor 3 Chair: Anja-Kristin Abendroth Chair: Judith Treas Do Digital Communications in Work and Family life increase well-being? University of Oviedo, Spain How do digital work arrangements shape individual attitudes toward ICTs? Autonomy at work as the crucial explanator 1: University College Dublin, Geary Institute for Public Policy; 2: University College Dublin, School of Sociology Inequalities in digital social contacts in Europe Institute of Sociology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic Navigating the Flexibility Paradox: Exploring Digital Communication Dynamics in Work and Family Life 1: University College Dublin, Geary Institute for Public Policy; 2: University College Dublin, School of Sociology; 3: University College Dublin, School of Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice; 4: University College Dublin, Geary Institute for Public Policy Western Balkans perspective: Remote Work and Work-life Balance Institute of Social Sciences, Serbia |
Explaining attitudes toward immigrants IV Location: C104, Floor 1 Chair: Eldad Davidov Chair: Oshrat Hochman Chair: Vera Messing Chair: Alice Ramos Perceived (In-)Justice and Attitudes Towards Immigration - An Application of the Theory of Social Production Functions and Goal Framing Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany |
Exploring variations within and between South European and other ESS Countries Location: C402, Floor 4 Chair: Alice Ramos Chair: Theoni Stathopoulou Chair: Stelios Stylianou Comparing social trust and individualism change over time in Spain and Southern European countries: the relevance for democracy assesment Comillas Pontifical University, Spain Gendered flexibility stigma and workload expectations in South European countries University of Bergamo, Italy Religion, identity, and party preference: A comparative study on Cultural Christians and vote choice using ESS data University of Milan, Italy Social change and continuity in Greece over the last 20 years. National Centre for Social Research, Athens, Greece Trust in political institutions in South European countries: social efficacy and social values Instituto de Ciências Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal |
How Europeans view and evaluate democracy, a decade later II Location: B103, Floor 1 Chair: Mónica Ferrín Chair: Pedro Magalhaes Attitudes Toward Liberal Democracy in Poland: A Three-Wave Panel Study of Stability and Change SWPS University, Poland Democratic Ideals and Alternatives: Understanding Discontent with Democracy Princeton University, United States of America How do migrants view and evaluate democracy in European host countries? 1: Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia; 2: Australian National University, Canberra, Australia |
More than a decade of research into switching general population surveys from interviewer-based to self-completion modes II Location: C401, Floor 4 Chair: Michèle Ernst Stähli Chair: Michael Ochsner Switching the mode from face-to-face to web/paper mixed mode: Comparability of real-life analyses across designs and questionnaire lengths nationally and cross-nationally FORS, Switzerland The European Values Study 1981-2026: from face-to-face to self-completion 1: European Values Study; 2: Tilburg University; 3: University of Trento Transitioning from interviewer-based to self-completion modes: Implications for the quality of measures of political behavior 1: University of Lausanne, Switzerland; 2: FORS, Switzerland |
Social and political trust in comparative context II Location: C103, Floor 1 Chair: Sandy Marquart-Pyatt Chair: Aaron Ponce Does religion affect trust in Europe? Marche Polytechnic University, Italy Investigating Trust in Europe across two Decades: Measurement Challenges with Data from the ESS University of Kent, UK; Inland Norway University, Norway Trust in institutions and the profile of inequality Sapienza University of Rome, Italy |
Multi-item measurement of subjective wellbeing and social wellbeing Location: C201, Floor 2 Chair: Gundi Knies Chair: Jascha Wagner Single-item measures in the questionnaire of the European Social Survey: the problem of invariance across countries Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Sociology, Czech Republic The Rural Wellbeing Advantage Reexamined: An Empirical Analysis of Subjective Wellbeing Components Across European Countries and Settlement Types 1: Thünen-Institut, Germany; 2: Natural Resources Institute Finland Volunteering and Life Satisfaction Across Welfare Regimes: Comparative Analysis of Four European Countries Marmara University, Turkiye The effect of social cohesion on individual quality of life 1: City, University of London, United Kingdom; 2: Univerità degli Studi di Salerno |
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3:00pm - 3:30pm |
Coffee break Location: Foyer, Floor 1 |
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3:30pm - 4:30pm |
Keynote III | How (un)fair is Europe? Jule Adriaans (2024 Jowell-Kaase Early Career Researcher, Bielefeld University) Location: Grande Auditório, Floor 1 Chair: Vera Lomazzi Introductory comments from Dr. Vera Lomazzi (University of Bergamo), on behalf of the European Survey Research Association (ESRA) Board |
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7:00pm - 11:00pm |
Conference dinner Location: Pateo Alfacinha |
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