Publications
Overlooked Potential? Childcare Services and Ukrainian Refugee Mothers in Germany (with Ludovica Gambaro, Mathias Huebener and C. Katharina Spieß), accepted at Demography, early version available as IZA Discussion Paper No. 17181.
Immigration, Female Labour Supply and Local Cultural Norms (with Jonas Jessen and Felix Weinhardt), The Economic Journal, Volume 134, 2024.
Winning paper of the Lluís Fina Award (XII edition).
Ukrainian Refugees in Germany: Evidence from a Large Representative Survey (with Brücker, Herbert; Ette, Andreas; Grabka, Markus M.; Kosyakova, Yuliya; Niehues, Wenke; Rother, Nina; Spieß, C. Katharina; Zinn, Sabine; Bujard, Martin; Cardozo, Adriana; Décieux, Jean P.; Maddox, Amrei; Milewski, Nadja; Sauer, Lenore; Schwanhäuser, Silvia; Siegert, Manuel; Steinhauer, Hans; Tanis, Kerstin), Comparative Population Studies, Volume 48, 2023.
The intergenerational transmission of gender norms - why and how adolescent males with working mothers matter for female labour market outcomes (with C. Katharina Spiess), Socio-Economic Review, Volume 20, 2021.
Understanding day care enrolment gaps (with Jonas Jessen and Sevrin Waights), Journal of Public Economics, Volume 190, 2020
The Impact of Publicly Funded Childcare on Parental Well-Being: Evidence from Cut-Off Rules, European Journal of Population, Volumne 36, 2020.
Selected work in progress
"Caring dads? Universal childcare, paternity leave and fathers' involvement" (with Malin Malbacher and Mathias Huebener), submitted.
"Degree of disruption: The impact of professional degree recognition on family formation and fertility of migrant women" (with Lidia Gutu), R&R Labor Economics.
"The economic impact of advance child support: Financial well-being, labor supply, and consumption of single-parent households" (with Elena Ziege), draft coming soon.
"Evaluating early interventions: The impact of home-visiting programs in BRISE on media usage" (with Lidia Gutu and C. Katharina Spieß), draft coming soon.
"Proximity of Early Education and Care Services – does it matter for parental employment and enrollment gaps?"