Advertisement · 728 × 90

Posts by Ely Strömberg

Thanks for the tips!As far as I can see SHARE has gender of partner, but not religion and birthplace of parents. Also a specific sample of course. Found one study that coded sexuality from a 1994 ISSP module, but questions seems to have been dropped since then. EVS seems to lack gender of partner.

1 month ago 1 0 0 1

Thanks for the tip! Indeed a limited number of countries but covers at least 3/9 of my countries of interest!

1 month ago 0 0 1 0

Also, how come that ESS has such extensive information about husband/wife/partner, but no information about their gender? As far as I can see it is not even included in the special module on Gender in round 11

1 month ago 0 0 1 0

QUESTION: Is there a magical European dataset including
1. Gender
2. Sexuality
3. Religion
4. Ethnicity / country of birth (+ for parents)
5. Occupation

ESS is missing 2, EU-LFS is missing 3, EU LGBTIQ Survey is missing 5.

Sharing is caring!

#sociologysky #surveydata

1 month ago 6 7 4 0

Trying to read more Dutch classics, and that they often revolve around WW2 resistance and the dilemmas of cleaning house afterwards seems fitting in these times. 📚⚖️🧑‍⚖️

1 month ago 6 0 0 5

Congratulations!

1 month ago 2 0 1 0

The more times you refresh the page the faster it goes!

1 month ago 0 0 1 0
Advertisement

Two more days to apply!

1 month ago 16 13 0 0

Talk about getting ahead of the story

1 month ago 3 0 0 0

So how much time are you supposed to spend checking journal submission portals for if anything has changed from "in review"? Like is 45 minutes a day too little?

#academicsky

1 month ago 8 0 0 1
Post image

💸🚨I am hiring 2 Postdocs for my ERC-funded project SOCDEBT on #debt dynamics across countries. One position: #SocialStratification + strong quantitative skills. The other: qualitative research and #EconomicSociology. waitkus.github.io/SOCDEBT/ 🚨💸

2 months ago 63 54 0 3
Email by Emotions and Society (journal) that my article was one of their most downloaded articles in 2025

Email by Emotions and Society (journal) that my article was one of their most downloaded articles in 2025

Did y’all actually read my FIRST! SOLE-AUTHORED! PUBLICATION! 😭 I’m not crying you are

2 months ago 17 2 2 0
Preview
Varför växer det politiska gapet mellan män och kvinnor? - Förmiddag i P1 Flera rapporter visar att unga kvinnor går allt mer åt vänster medan de unga männen går åt höger. Vad beror det på och får det några konsekvenser?

Pratade om vårt nya forskningsprojekt i P1!

2 months ago 0 1 1 0
A text "captures noise" with the i marked as a tracked change. Below left an overfitted model graph, below right a statue without a nose and a hand making the "I got your nose" gesture

A text "captures noise" with the i marked as a tracked change. Below left an overfitted model graph, below right a statue without a nose and a hand making the "I got your nose" gesture

Proofing

2 months ago 2 0 0 1
3 months ago 2 0 0 0
Markets and Mobility: How Employers Structure Economic Opportunity

Markets and Mobility: How Employers Structure Economic Opportunity

Intergenerational mobility, measuring the ability to achieve economic success regardless of family background, is a critical reflection of a society’s commitment to equality of opportunity. Rising income inequality has raised concerns about the potential erosion of upward mobility. While education has traditionally been viewed as the path to mobility, its transformative power is facing challenges in a rapidly evolving job market. This project reorients the focus of intergenerational mobility research by highlighting the labor market as an arena for the reproduction of advantage. It employs a comparative approach, using administrative data from four countries: Sweden, Austria, England, and the United States. It also incorporates evidence from a broader set of nations through cross-national surveys, longitudinal household surveys, labor force surveys, secondary data, and digital trace data. The project employs cutting-edge empirical methods, including quasi- experimental designs, event studies, within-family comparisons, decomposition analyses, counterfactual simulations, and diagnostic checks to rigorously assess the extent of inequalities in the labor market. The research investigates how family background influences the sorting of individuals to employers and workplaces, accounting for education and occupation, and explores variations in career progression within and between employers. It comprehensively catalogues and assesses mechanisms shaping workplace inequality, contributing to the development of social closure theory. Additionally, the project evaluates intervention strategies, encompassing both employer practices and government actions, to promote fair opportunity in the labor market.

Intergenerational mobility, measuring the ability to achieve economic success regardless of family background, is a critical reflection of a society’s commitment to equality of opportunity. Rising income inequality has raised concerns about the potential erosion of upward mobility. While education has traditionally been viewed as the path to mobility, its transformative power is facing challenges in a rapidly evolving job market. This project reorients the focus of intergenerational mobility research by highlighting the labor market as an arena for the reproduction of advantage. It employs a comparative approach, using administrative data from four countries: Sweden, Austria, England, and the United States. It also incorporates evidence from a broader set of nations through cross-national surveys, longitudinal household surveys, labor force surveys, secondary data, and digital trace data. The project employs cutting-edge empirical methods, including quasi- experimental designs, event studies, within-family comparisons, decomposition analyses, counterfactual simulations, and diagnostic checks to rigorously assess the extent of inequalities in the labor market. The research investigates how family background influences the sorting of individuals to employers and workplaces, accounting for education and occupation, and explores variations in career progression within and between employers. It comprehensively catalogues and assesses mechanisms shaping workplace inequality, contributing to the development of social closure theory. Additionally, the project evaluates intervention strategies, encompassing both employer practices and government actions, to promote fair opportunity in the labor market.

JOB! I'm hiring a postdoc for 2 years on my ERC MaMo project.

Looking for someone with strong quant methods, ongoing work close to the project's aims, and a desire to publish in sociology. Start flexible in the next 12 months.

Formal call out shortly, but contact me first.

3 months ago 101 108 0 6
Article in Emotions and Society: ‚Because like if you feel guilty, then it’s usually a sign‘: on the role of emotions in conceptualising infidelity

Article in Emotions and Society: ‚Because like if you feel guilty, then it’s usually a sign‘: on the role of emotions in conceptualising infidelity

FIRST! SOLE-AUTHORED! PUBLICATION! 🎊

Making myself guilty of self-promotion but my first ever sole-authored article is an Editor’s Choice... still open access for 10 days, get it while it’s hot

Link doi.org/10.1332/2631...

3 months ago 64 6 4 0
Advertisement

damn what is wrong with me, i am having the hardest time concentrating on work, i lament as i compulsively refresh live feeds of unspeakable horrors

3 months ago 5150 979 83 33

Working on my BILF to do list this morning. That’s Book I’d Like to Finish!

3 months ago 5 3 1 0

Anyone interested should read the whole thread but here's a big headline finding: assortative mating on education is mostly social, not genetic.

This has major implications for intergenerational transmission, making models that ascribe a large role to genetics (Clark) look less plausible.

3 months ago 14 3 0 0

I've had the honour to convene this seminar series about the politics of immigration and exclusion.

Looking forward to learning more about the research by @turnbulldugarte.com @profsob.bsky.social @katharinalawall.bsky.social @distasioval.bsky.social and @stefaniesprong.bsky.social + drinks after!

3 months ago 13 5 0 0

New garden new adventures! Is it elderflower and sage?

3 months ago 2 0 1 0

He was my highlight! They couldn’t be bothered to write a backstory so just used Instant Gay Best Friend (TM). Enjoyably bad movie!

3 months ago 0 0 1 0

There's nothing like a revision deadline to motivate me to bake huge amounts of saffron buns, and no, it's not the "christmas spirit"🙃

4 months ago 1 1 0 0

Should be a word for this…

bsky.app/profile/sbva...

4 months ago 0 0 0 0
Advertisement

And the far right is dropping the Jewish part of Judeo-Christian values, who could have seen this coming?

4 months ago 1 0 1 0
Video

As @seanjwestwood.bsky.social's terrifying new PNAS article demonstrates, LLMs can now pass almost every attention check, mirror personas, stay consistent across pages, and systematically bias responses in the aggregate.

So here’s a different angle: verify physical presence, not text.

4 months ago 53 9 2 3
1. Less skilled labor is abundant.
2. Skilled emigration is a brain drain.
3. Development substitutes for migration.
4. Migration substitutes for failing development, but doesn't cause development.

1. Less skilled labor is abundant. 2. Skilled emigration is a brain drain. 3. Development substitutes for migration. 4. Migration substitutes for failing development, but doesn't cause development.

The International Monetary Fund asked me to review the literature on migration economics to draw lessons for low-income countries.

In a new @iza.org paper, I argue that policy for the 21st century must discard four outdated ideas.

www.iza.org/publications...

🧵 thread—>

4 months ago 223 108 2 14
On the left Alexandra Breckinridge with blond hair, on the right in a facemask with white beard

On the left Alexandra Breckinridge with blond hair, on the right in a facemask with white beard

Feels strange to have an American movie in 2025 about a cis woman crossdressing as a man in order to get hired as a resort santa, including awkward interactions in the mens dressing room…

4 months ago 1 0 0 0
Poster for My Secret Santa with a woman in Santa clothes in a chair and a man in a suit behind it.

Poster for My Secret Santa with a woman in Santa clothes in a chair and a man in a suit behind it.

Our household has an annual tradition of watching bad Christmas movies. First out: My Secret Santa
Small town unemployed single mom meets the scandalous heir to the big resort family that’s trying to shape up his act.

3/10

4 months ago 4 0 1 0