I have only just started the book, but relational inequality theory seems to offer something on this.
I have only just started the book, but relational inequality theory seems to offer something on this.
I feel like the lack of evidence accumulation is, if anything, worse in sociology. If "other fields" = natural sciences, then I would argue that the social sciences are far more likely to get their topics dictated by their research objects which moreover are moving targets.
"Das wΓ€re ein Durchbruch"
Die BildungsΓΆkonomin Kerstin Schneider ΓΌber den Forschungsdatengesetz-Entwurf, offene Baustellen und neue Chancen fΓΌr evidenzbasierte Politik.
Im Wiarda-Blog: www.jmwiarda.de/blog/2026/02...
Studying what facilitates career transitions across sectors through a field experiment analyzing two programs. Tech jobs increase by 15 percentage points with mentoring and by 11 percentage points when workers create portfolios, from Susan Athey and Emil Palikot www.nber.org/papers/w34750
Really looking forward to attending this Foundations of Causal Inference workshop at the Isaac Newton Institute for Mathematical Sciences in Cambridge next week. Looks like a great group to learn from!
www.newton.ac.uk/event/CIFW01/
link ππ€
Marginal Interventional Effects (Zhou, Opacic) Conventional causal estimands, such as the average treatment effect (ATE), capture how the mean outcome in a population or subpopulation would change if all units were assigned to treatment versus control. Real-world policy changes, however,
The new album of his band Geese has some great songs: www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3ud...
Are you aware of this article?
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
I'm surprised I only came across it now, but this review on improving communication in data visualization is excellent.
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
I'm facilitating a causal inference reading group next semester for Sociology PhD students. (I will also be learning!) If there are (1) pedagogical articles or (2) empirical examples in soc that you β€οΈ, will you share in the comments? [And please RT to help me crowd-source!]
I hope working papers are fine:
doi.org/10.31219/osf...
osf.io/x4526_v1/
arxiv.org/pdf/2507.01517
Something to look forward to π€©: www.cambridge.org/core/books/c...
Life satisfaction mostly declines with age. Previous findings (esp. the famous U-shaped age-SWB trajectory) were artifacts of misspecified models. doi.org/10.1093/esr/...
If you want to read the review paper by @jenniebrand.bsky.social , Hyunjoon Park, and Michelle Jackson about recent trends in social stratification and mobility. Please check out the paper π #ASA #ISA #RSSM
drive.google.com/file/d/1bgkT...
Understandable, but he is a German philosopher.
Judging by 26., you might enjoy "Moralspektakel". There are tons of podcast/YouTube interviews with him about the book.
Have you read "Moralspektakel" by HΓΌbl?
I can recommend the slides by BrΓΌderl & Ludwig (www.ls3.soziologie.uni-muenchen.de/studium-lehr...) and by Fan Li (chapters 8 & 9: www2.stat.duke.edu/~fl35/Causal...)
Reads like a updated version of the causal description vs. causal explanation distinction in Shadish, Cook & Campbell (2002).
We are hiring a 3-year postdoc for the ERC-funded WEALTHTRAJECT project at DIW Berlin. More details here: www.diw.de/sixcms/detai...
Can't wait for the Marvel movie
New paper with @gaiaghirardi.bsky.social just out in Demography!
π read.dukeupress.edu/demography/a...
Hereβs a short thread on what we foundβand why it might be worth a look.
βΌοΈ2nd update of MZ-SUF-Panel 2016-19 linking toolβΌοΈThanks to a user feedback we found an error in the tool and now have uploaded a corrected version of the linking tool. You can find the documenting GESIS paper and the do-file on our MISSY page www.gesis.org/en/missy/mat...
New NBER working paper with Andrew Johnston and Nolan Pope. We examine family dissolution, proxied by divorce (an observable breakdown), and how family circumstances and childrenβs outcomes change. www.nber.org/papers/w33776
Haha yes exactly! Next Wednesday they will present on common support and impact functions, so I'm already expecting another eye-opening causal inference sermon π
www.ls3.soziologie.uni-muenchen.de/aktuelles/fo...
Katrin Auspurg, Josef BrΓΌderl and Lena Jost have some nice slides on this, including DAGs and coefficient plots: www.en.soziologie.uni-muenchen.de/venedig/veni...
Figure 3 in Lundberg et al. (2021) is another nice illustration.
Derek Thompson has also interviewed David Deming on this: www.theringer.com/podcasts/pla...
I have a new paper out! "Should Social Insurance Programs Count as Wealth? Augmented Wealth in Research and Policy." Published yesterday in Socio-Economic Review @sasemeeting.bsky.social doi.org/10.1093/ser/...
Join us for the first
ISI INTERNATIONAL WEALTH CONFERENCE
in Munich, October 9-11 2025
CfP: www.lmu.de/isi/en/lates...
Submit a short abstract or paper by April 28.
Keynotes by Annette Lareau & Lane Kenworthy. And if you arrive a few days early, you can catch the last weekend of Oktoberfest :)
No problem! Let me know if you find anything on academic performance.
I don't know anything on academic performance. But these articles might still be helpful (although you probably already know them):
journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/...
link.springer.com/article/10.1... link.springer.com/article/10.1...