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Posts by Nils Witte

CfP "Migration als Zukunft der Arbeit" auf dem DGS Kongress 2026 endet am 31.03.

Wir freuen uns auf Eure Einreichungen an der Schnittstelle von Migration und Arbeit

soziologie.de/fileadmin/se...

4 weeks ago 0 1 0 0

CfP "Zukünfte postmigrantischer (Un-)Sichtbarkeit in der Einwanderungsgesellschaft" auf dem DGS Kongress 2026 endet am 31.03.

Die Sektion freut sich auf Eure Beiträge

soziologie.de/fileadmin/se...

4 weeks ago 0 1 0 0
CfP_ComputationalSocialInequality.pdf

Doing computational social science research on inequality on your own? This special issue is for you!

We’re inviting submissions for a Historical Social Research issue on “Computational Social Inequality Research in Practice.”

📅 Deadline: 15 May 2026

#CallForPapers #CompSocSci #Inequality

1 month ago 6 9 0 1
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How AI use in scholarly publishing threatens research integrity, lessens trust, and invites misinformation Since 2023, a significant number of published scholarly papers show signs of having been edited using AI tools. These tools are also being used to review papers and search and discovery tools, in ways...

This is good. The slop tsunami is coming for scholarship at a very bad time.

One thing I would add: generating papers is the worst thing LLMs can do in the research ecosystem, where we really need fewer papers to review and publish, not more.
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1 month ago 23 6 1 0
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NEW PUBLICATION
“How the Media Cordon Sanitaire Crumbles: Lessons from Germany” now out in @prxjournal.bsky.social
🔓 doi.org/10.1080/2474736X.2026.2621808
I’m very happy that this paper is out – this project is particularly important to me.

2 months ago 169 66 3 11
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Wir trauern um Serkan C. Mit tiefer Betroffenheit haben wir vom Tod unseres Kollegen Serkan C. erfahren, der nach einem brutalen Angriff während seiner Arbeit als Zugbegleiter seinen Verletzungen erlegen ist.

Serkan C. war alleinerziehender Vater zweier Kinder. Um seine Familie zu unterstützen, wurde ein Spendenkonto eingerichtet:

Empfänger: DB Regio
IBAN: DE 15 5008 0000 0091 6377 01
Verwendungszweck: Serkan C.

www.dgb.de/presse/press...

2 months ago 22 9 0 0

CfP "Migration und Arbeitsmarkt" für den DGS Kongress 2026 in Mainz. Abstracts auf Deutsch und Englisch sind willkommen.

Deadline für Abstracts ist der 31.03.2026

2 months ago 2 1 0 0
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CfP "(Un)Sichtbarkeiten" für DGS Kongress 2026. Abstracts auf Deutsch und Englisch sind willkommen.

2 months ago 2 0 0 0
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Life Course & Social Stratification Call for Abstracts for the ECSR Thematic Conference Life Course and Social Stratification 23-24 April 2026, University of Trento, Italy The Life Course approach has gained powerful traction across th...

ECSR Thematic Conference on the Life Course and Social Stratification, 23-24 April, University of Trento. Smaller thematic conferences like these are usually the best place to present and network, imo. Submit by 22 February. sites.google.com/unitn.it/ecs...

3 months ago 21 10 2 0
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INAS Conference 2026 - Nuffield College Oxford University

Since the first International Workshop on Analytical Sociology in 2008, INAS is returning to Oxford.

The 18th Annual INAS Conference will take place from 1 to 3 July 2026 at the University of Oxford, hosted by Nuffield College and the Department of Sociology.

Submission deadline: 1 Feb 2026

4 months ago 18 12 0 1

In light of record submission rates and a large volume of AI-generated slop, SocArXiv recently implemented a policy requiring ORCIDs linked in the OSF profile of submitting authors, and narrowing our focus to social science subjects. Today we are taking two more steps:
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4 months ago 286 143 4 23
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Flucht: Studie: Hiesige Ukrainer - hohe Jobquote, viele Trennungen Hier finden Sie Informationen zu dem Thema „Flucht“. Lesen Sie jetzt „Studie: Hiesige Ukrainer - hohe Jobquote, viele Trennungen“.

"Rund die Hälfte der schon kurz nach Russlands Überfall auf die Ukraine nach Deutschland Geflohenen im erwerbsfähigen Alter hat hier bereits eine Arbeit."

www.zeit.de/news/2025-11...

Neue BiB Studie zu Ukrainischen Schutzsuchenden in DE. Download hier: www.bib.bund.de/Publikation/...

5 months ago 1 0 0 0

It's easy for some of you to just never use LLMs and just criticize people who do. I would like to be in that situation. But here I am, with my moderator volunteers, assessing hundreds of papers submitted to @socarxiv.bsky.social, trying to decide how to fairly judge whether to accept them. /1

5 months ago 38 13 10 3
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Forschung - Migranten in Europa teilen demokratische Werte Zuwanderer in Deutschland und anderen Staaten in Europa haben laut einer Untersuchung ähnlich ausgeprägte demokratische Werte wie Menschen ohne Migrationshintergrund. Das ergab eine Studie der Univers...

📣 Migrant*innen in Europa teilen demokratische Werte

Meldung der @dpa.com zur Studie von
MZES-Vorstandsmitglied Marc Helbling, @fguelzau.bsky.social ( @svrmigration.bsky.social ) und
MZES-Fellow @snmorgenstern.bsky.social

Pressemitteilung folgt.

👉 www.deutschlandfunk.de/migranten-in...
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5 months ago 11 9 1 1

Heute konstituierte sich der Vorstand der DGS-Sektion #Migration und ethnische Minderheiten. Freue mich auf die Zusammenarbeit u.a. mit @niwitte.bsky.social @piwoni.bsky.social – und ganz besonders darauf, mein Herzensprojekt, die Umbenennung der Sektion, weiter voranzubringen.
#dgs #soziologie

5 months ago 6 2 0 0
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ReplicationResearch.org is now open for submissions!

Submit replications and reproductions from many different fields, as well as conceptual contributions. With diamond OA, open and citable peer review reports, and reproducibility checks, we push the boundaries of open and fair publishing.

6 months ago 82 48 3 7
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This is a highly interesting, timely and great initiative - a new diamond OA journal for #replication research! It is interdisciplinary, but #PolSci is specifically invited. Hence, if you or someone you know has an interesting replication paper, do not hesitate to submit!

6 months ago 12 10 1 0
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When expectations backfire: educational differences in declining destination attachment among recent immigrants Abstract. Immigrants with higher levels of education tend to report more discrimination and a weaker attachment to their destination country than immigrant

New paper on educational inequalities in declining destination attachment among immigrants in @sfjournal.bsky.social (with Ruedin): doi.org/10.1093/sf/s...

(1/3): Tertiary educated immigrants react particularly strong to unmet migration expectations, showing stronger declines emotional attachment

6 months ago 13 7 1 0

There is no world in which masked and armed agents of the state running down delivery drivers makes us safer. That our information environment and political leaders have convinced people otherwise is a massive failure.

6 months ago 1003 283 21 7
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The next ECSR conference is brought to you by @tcdsociology.bsky.social and @esri.ie!

Trinity College Dublin, 15-16 June 2026
www.ecsr2026.net

#ECSR2026

Abstract submission deadline: 11 January 2026

7 months ago 24 14 0 3
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Guten Morgen Duisburg #DGS2025

6 months ago 11 1 0 0

Mittwoch um 17 Uhr in LB 107 beim #DGS2025. Ich freue mich auf die Diskussion mit @katharinahppe.bsky.social und @lwestheuser.bsky.social zur #Exponentialgesellschaft

Danke @norawaitkus.bsky.social und Monika Eigmüller für die Organisation!

7 months ago 23 6 0 1

Bei Lektüre von #Exponentialgesellschaft by @deutschmann.bsky.social
viel gelernt über Ökologie, Wachstum, Stabilisierung. Wichtige Denkanstöße. Vor allem bleibt die Frage: Wie soll ich leben? Welche Kompromisse muss ich und muss die Gesellschaft schließen?

See you in Duisburg #DGS2025 bei AmC3

7 months ago 4 0 0 1

Striking visualisation of the global mobility divide! Also chance to highlight some relevant research... 🧵

7 months ago 18 10 2 1

Working on the integration paradox? Join us at next year's IMISCOE conference! 👇

7 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Are you planning to attend IMISCOE 2026 in Girona and working on immigrant naturalization?

@ninaca.bsky.social and I are inviting abstracts to put together a panel. Sends us your paper abstract if you are interested to join!

@migcitpol.bsky.social #MigCitSky

www.linkedin.com/posts/nina-c...

7 months ago 8 8 0 0
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Citizenship by Choice, Not Necessity: Political and Emotional Drivers of Naturalisation Intentions Among Migrants From High Income Countries In the growing body of research on immigrant naturalisation, migrants from high income countries have received scant attention in their own right because of their relatively low baseline citizenship ....

Are you from a high income country? Do you live abroad? Ever thought about taking up a new citizenship?

Then, check out my new paper with Floris Peters (Utrecht)

doi.org/10.1002/psp....

@migcitpol.bsky.social
@migcitizenapsa.bsky.social
@populationeu.bsky.social

7 months ago 14 4 0 0
Casting votes or crossing borders? How living abroad reduces
mobile Europeans’ likelihood to participate in European
elections

ABSTRACT
Both freedom of movement and voting in European elections are
fundamental citizenship rights at the heart of European
integration. Ideally, EU citizens should be able to exercise both
rights simultaneously. Yet, in practice, tensions exist between the
two: Despite their strong emotional attachment to the European
Union, EU citizens living outside their country of citizenship have
a reduced likelihood to vote in European elections, even when
they reside within the EU. This article demonstrates this pattern
empirically for German emigrants in the 2019 European
Parliament election, based on data from the German Emigration
and Remigration Panel Study (GERPS). This survey is unique in
that it covers both mobile German citizens who currently live
abroad and those who have lived abroad, but have recently
returned to Germany. Self-reported turnout was significantly
reduced among those currently living abroad. Bureaucratic
hurdles (including early opt-in registration deadlines, complex
registration procedures, and tedious access to ballot) are
identified as a key explanation for the decreased participation.
These findings seem to contradict basic democratic principles and
could have political implications: Since there are more than
eleven million mobile EU citizens who are eligible to vote,
reduced turnout among this group could affect election outcomes.

Casting votes or crossing borders? How living abroad reduces mobile Europeans’ likelihood to participate in European elections ABSTRACT Both freedom of movement and voting in European elections are fundamental citizenship rights at the heart of European integration. Ideally, EU citizens should be able to exercise both rights simultaneously. Yet, in practice, tensions exist between the two: Despite their strong emotional attachment to the European Union, EU citizens living outside their country of citizenship have a reduced likelihood to vote in European elections, even when they reside within the EU. This article demonstrates this pattern empirically for German emigrants in the 2019 European Parliament election, based on data from the German Emigration and Remigration Panel Study (GERPS). This survey is unique in that it covers both mobile German citizens who currently live abroad and those who have lived abroad, but have recently returned to Germany. Self-reported turnout was significantly reduced among those currently living abroad. Bureaucratic hurdles (including early opt-in registration deadlines, complex registration procedures, and tedious access to ballot) are identified as a key explanation for the decreased participation. These findings seem to contradict basic democratic principles and could have political implications: Since there are more than eleven million mobile EU citizens who are eligible to vote, reduced turnout among this group could affect election outcomes.

Figure 1 shows the registration deadlines, based on official EU information, for mobile Europeans who wanted to vote in the 2024 EP election, for all member states that provided such information. It reveals several major obstacles: First, the registration options and deadlines varied widely between EU member states. For example, Swedish citizens residing in Belgium had two choices: register to vote in Sweden by 16 May or to vote in Belgium by 29 February. Among the 13 member states that listed a registration deadline for their own nationals residing abroad, there were no fewer than twelve different registration dates (Figure 1, Panel A). In the case of registration deadlines for non-nationals, there were even 20 unique dates among the 20 different countries that listed a specific deadline. 4This multiplicity of rules requires mobile Europeans to actively search for the conditions that apply in their particular case and thus complicates their situation.
Crucially, many of these deadlines were very early. Several deadlines had already expired in March or earlier – multiple months before the election on 9 June 2024. The most extreme case concerns non-national EU citizens in Spain, who had to register more than four months before the election. This requirement creates a serious obstacle to participation in the election.

Figure 1 shows the registration deadlines, based on official EU information, for mobile Europeans who wanted to vote in the 2024 EP election, for all member states that provided such information. It reveals several major obstacles: First, the registration options and deadlines varied widely between EU member states. For example, Swedish citizens residing in Belgium had two choices: register to vote in Sweden by 16 May or to vote in Belgium by 29 February. Among the 13 member states that listed a registration deadline for their own nationals residing abroad, there were no fewer than twelve different registration dates (Figure 1, Panel A). In the case of registration deadlines for non-nationals, there were even 20 unique dates among the 20 different countries that listed a specific deadline. 4This multiplicity of rules requires mobile Europeans to actively search for the conditions that apply in their particular case and thus complicates their situation. Crucially, many of these deadlines were very early. Several deadlines had already expired in March or earlier – multiple months before the election on 9 June 2024. The most extreme case concerns non-national EU citizens in Spain, who had to register more than four months before the election. This requirement creates a serious obstacle to participation in the election.

Figure 2 displays the descriptive differences between the four groups under study. Among Germans who currently reside in other EU countries, the average self-reported turnout in the 2019 EP election was 54 percent (Panel A). This number is close to the actual average turnout of 51 percent in the European Union as a whole, but lower than the average turnout of 61 percent in the general German population (Swedish
National Election Studies Program 2019). Moreover, past intra-EU migrants (i.e. Germans who have lived in other EU countries and have since returned to Germany), who are a more meaningful reference group since they have comparable socio-demographic characteristics (similar level of education, age, etc.; cf. Online Appendix, Table A2), feature a self-reported turnout of 81 percent. Thus it seems that the probability
to vote for those currently residing abroad was suppressed by 28 percentage points compared with their counterparts who have returned to Germany. The turnout gap is even larger for global migrants: Germans who currently reside in a country outside the EU had only a 25 percent probability to vote in the past European election, compared with a turnout of 90 percent among past global migrants – a striking difference of 65 percentage points. Put differently, global migratory moves suppressed the turnout by 72 percent.

Figure 2 displays the descriptive differences between the four groups under study. Among Germans who currently reside in other EU countries, the average self-reported turnout in the 2019 EP election was 54 percent (Panel A). This number is close to the actual average turnout of 51 percent in the European Union as a whole, but lower than the average turnout of 61 percent in the general German population (Swedish National Election Studies Program 2019). Moreover, past intra-EU migrants (i.e. Germans who have lived in other EU countries and have since returned to Germany), who are a more meaningful reference group since they have comparable socio-demographic characteristics (similar level of education, age, etc.; cf. Online Appendix, Table A2), feature a self-reported turnout of 81 percent. Thus it seems that the probability to vote for those currently residing abroad was suppressed by 28 percentage points compared with their counterparts who have returned to Germany. The turnout gap is even larger for global migrants: Germans who currently reside in a country outside the EU had only a 25 percent probability to vote in the past European election, compared with a turnout of 90 percent among past global migrants – a striking difference of 65 percentage points. Put differently, global migratory moves suppressed the turnout by 72 percent.

Regression models corroborating the previous descriptive findings

Regression models corroborating the previous descriptive findings

New JEMS #openaccess paper w/ @niwitte.bsky.social:

We show that EU citizens living abroad are less likely to vote in European elections due to bureaucratic obstacles such as early registration deadlines. This happens even for intra-EU movers who feel attached to the EU.

doi.org/10.1080/1369...

7 months ago 9 4 0 0
Erdbeben Afghanistan: Dringender Spendenaufruf | Afghanischer Frauenverein e.V.

www.afghanischer-frauenverein.de/erdbeben-afg...

7 months ago 1 1 0 0
From Olga Kutsenko (olga.kutsenko.ua28@gmail.com), August 1, 2025

A Call to Scholars: Navigating a World in Exponential Change Join the V Congress of the Sociological Association of Ukraine (SAU)

At a time of unprecedented global turmoil, wars and rapid transformation, the Sociological Association of Ukraine invites you to a critical dialogue. We convene under the vital theme, "Sociology and Society in an Exponential World: Research Challenges, Opportunities, and Prospects", from the unique vantage point of Kharkiv, Ukraine. This is more than a conference; it is an act of intellectual resilience and a crucial opportunity for the global academic community to engage directly with Ukrainian scholars. We will delve into the most urgent sociological questions of our time, exploring everything from the nature of societal resilience in wartime to the future of a world grappling with chaos and exponential change. Join us to share your research, challenge existing paradigms, and contribute to a conversation that has never been more relevant. Be part of this vital conversation.

• What: V Congress of the Sociological Association of Ukraine 

• When: November 20-21, 2025 

• Where: V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Kharkiv, Ukraine (with a fully accessible on-line format)

• Call for abstracts and papers deadline: September 20, 2025

For submission guidelines and registration, please visit the official SAU website:https://sau.in.ua/opinion/the-v-congress-of-the-sociological-association-of-ukraine-2025/

We look forward to welcoming you, in person or online, to help shape the future of sociology.

From Olga Kutsenko (olga.kutsenko.ua28@gmail.com), August 1, 2025 A Call to Scholars: Navigating a World in Exponential Change Join the V Congress of the Sociological Association of Ukraine (SAU) At a time of unprecedented global turmoil, wars and rapid transformation, the Sociological Association of Ukraine invites you to a critical dialogue. We convene under the vital theme, "Sociology and Society in an Exponential World: Research Challenges, Opportunities, and Prospects", from the unique vantage point of Kharkiv, Ukraine. This is more than a conference; it is an act of intellectual resilience and a crucial opportunity for the global academic community to engage directly with Ukrainian scholars. We will delve into the most urgent sociological questions of our time, exploring everything from the nature of societal resilience in wartime to the future of a world grappling with chaos and exponential change. Join us to share your research, challenge existing paradigms, and contribute to a conversation that has never been more relevant. Be part of this vital conversation. • What: V Congress of the Sociological Association of Ukraine • When: November 20-21, 2025 • Where: V. N. Karazin Kharkiv National University, Kharkiv, Ukraine (with a fully accessible on-line format) • Call for abstracts and papers deadline: September 20, 2025 For submission guidelines and registration, please visit the official SAU website:https://sau.in.ua/opinion/the-v-congress-of-the-sociological-association-of-ukraine-2025/ We look forward to welcoming you, in person or online, to help shape the future of sociology.

Interesting call from the Sociological Association of Ukraine: "Sociology and Society in an Exponential World"

#Exponentialgesellschaft

8 months ago 2 1 1 0