Family Policy OutcomesPropositions
View More
Proposition 10: The extraordinary lies within the curve of normality
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesPhD NetworkPropositions
View More
Proposition 9: Dutch universities (used to) pay PhD candidates not to act like students.
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesPropositions
View More
Proposition 8: Critics of sociology stating that the discipline has no ‘excess empirical content’, ignore efforts of methodological rigor without which ‘anything goes’
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesPropositions
View More
Proposition 6 – Country-comparative questions are sometimes best answered by using person-level data
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesPropositions
View More
Proposition 5: Family policy arrangements that facilitate smaller earnings inequality within households also reduce inequality between households
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesPropositions
View More
Proposition 4: The conditions for women’s earnings to increase inequality between households are hard to meet
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesPropositions
View More
Proposition 3: People don’t just act out of interest; they also need opportunities
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesPropositions
View More
Proposition 2: It is too simple to only think of childcare leave as a mechanism of inclusion of women in the labour market, as it can also be a mechanism of exclusion.
Jan 2014
Family Policy OutcomesMy PublicationsPropositionsScience
View More