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Tim Reeskens

Researcher at Tilburg University

Publications -  84
Citations -  2491

Tim Reeskens is an academic researcher from Tilburg University. The author has contributed to research in topics: European Social Survey & Welfare state. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 79 publications receiving 2032 citations. Previous affiliations of Tim Reeskens include University of Amsterdam & Catholic University of Leuven.

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Ethnic Diversity and Generalized Trust in Europe : a Cross-National Multilevel Study

TL;DR: In this article, attitudinal measurements from the European Social Survey are combined with Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development data on migration patterns, thus examining the relationship between diversity and trust in a comparative manner across 20 European countries.
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Cross-cultural measurement equivalence of generalized trust. Evidence from the European Social Survey (2002 and 2004)

TL;DR: This article investigates the cross-cultural equivalence of the three-item scale on generalized trust that is included in the European Social Survey 2002 and 2004 waves and offers some suggestions on how the generalized trust scale might be used in a (sufficiently) reliable manner in cross- cultural research across Europe.
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Disentangling the 'New Liberal Dilemma': on the relation between general welfare redistribution preferences and welfare chauvinism

TL;DR: In this paper, the question of whether opinions about immigrants' access to welfare provisions originate from general preferences towards welfare redistribution and whether this association is moderated by the national context is investigated.
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Migration to European Countries: A Structural Explanation of Patterns, 1980–2004†

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that migration flows react to economic incentives, mainly with regard to the labor market, but also to cultural and colonial linkages, and that immigrants are not attracted by high levels of social expenditure.
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Beyond the civic-ethnic dichotomy: investigating the structure of citizenship concepts across thirty-three countries

TL;DR: The authors empirically investigated the applicability of this dichotomy based on an analysis of International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) survey data across thirty-three societies and showed that this dichotomous structure can indeed be detected and therefore the theoretical dichotomy can be considered as empirically valid.