Shifting Ethnic Boundaries and Inequality in Israel: Or, How the Polish Peddler Became a German Intellectual
Published:
2008
Online ISBN:
9780804779579
Print ISBN:
9780804756976
Contents
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Appendix One Cross-tabulation of occupation abroad by occupation in Israel Appendix One Cross-tabulation of occupation abroad by occupation in Israel
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Appendix Two Variable Definitions and of Analytical Strategy Appendix Two Variable Definitions and of Analytical Strategy
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Overview of Analytical Strategy Overview of Analytical Strategy
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Statistical Significance Statistical Significance
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Variable Definition Variable Definition
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Variables Introduced in chapters 2 Through 5 Variables Introduced in chapters 2 Through 5
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Variables Introduced in Chapter 7 Variables Introduced in Chapter 7
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Variables Introduced In Chapter 8 Variables Introduced In Chapter 8
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A. Individual Analysis A. Individual Analysis
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B. Town-level Analysis in Appendix 22 B. Town-level Analysis in Appendix 22
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Variables Introduced In Chapter 9 Variables Introduced In Chapter 9
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Appendix Three Means and standard deviations of variables for the six largest countries and Egypt (included in Chapter 7) Appendix Three Means and standard deviations of variables for the six largest countries and Egypt (included in Chapter 7)
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Appendix Four Correlations of all variables for the six largest countries Appendix Four Correlations of all variables for the six largest countries
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Appendix Five Standardized coefficients for the regression of Israeli prestige on education (ED), prestige abroad (PA), and age at arrival (AG) From an equation using linear terms only; all countries together Appendix Five Standardized coefficients for the regression of Israeli prestige on education (ED), prestige abroad (PA), and age at arrival (AG) From an equation using linear terms only; all countries together
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Appendix Six Occupational groups accounting for 75% of population employed abroad and percentage of sample in that occupation, for six most populous countries of origin Appendix Six Occupational groups accounting for 75% of population employed abroad and percentage of sample in that occupation, for six most populous countries of origin
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Appendix Seven Equations for regression of prestige in Israel on prestige abroad (PA), education (ED), age at arrival (AG), and year of arrival (YR) for the six largest countries of origin; separate equations for each country Appendix Seven Equations for regression of prestige in Israel on prestige abroad (PA), education (ED), age at arrival (AG), and year of arrival (YR) for the six largest countries of origin; separate equations for each country
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Appendix Eight Comparison of R2 values for regressions of Israeli prestige on family formation scale (left column) and its components as separate variables (right column) with and without controls Appendix Eight Comparison of R2 values for regressions of Israeli prestige on family formation scale (left column) and its components as separate variables (right column) with and without controls
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Appendix Nine Main effects of cultural capital on immigrant attainment Appendix Nine Main effects of cultural capital on immigrant attainment
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Appendix Ten Interactions between cultural capital and educational slope Appendix Ten Interactions between cultural capital and educational slope
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Appendix Eleven Equations used for calculating Figure 7.1; includes interactions between cultural capital and all human capital variables Appendix Eleven Equations used for calculating Figure 7.1; includes interactions between cultural capital and all human capital variables
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Appendix Twelve Cultural capital by ethnicity for all countries and for six largest countries Appendix Twelve Cultural capital by ethnicity for all countries and for six largest countries
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Appendix Thirteen Average educational attainment and distribution into major occupational categories in Israel for men who were educated in religious institutions Appendix Thirteen Average educational attainment and distribution into major occupational categories in Israel for men who were educated in religious institutions
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Appendix Fourteen Correlations between ethnicity (as Mizrahi/Ashkenazi distinction) and the family formation scale (and its components) for different combinations of cultural capital Appendix Fourteen Correlations between ethnicity (as Mizrahi/Ashkenazi distinction) and the family formation scale (and its components) for different combinations of cultural capital
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Appendix Fifteen Examination of the “Moroccan lag” in Israeli prestige among those with full cultural capital: regression of Israeli prestige on human capital, year of arrival, family formation, and settlement type in Israel for men with secular educations Appendix Fifteen Examination of the “Moroccan lag” in Israeli prestige among those with full cultural capital: regression of Israeli prestige on human capital, year of arrival, family formation, and settlement type in Israel for men with secular educations
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Appendix Sixteen Regressions of Israeli occupational prestige on freedom from family responsibilities, western language primacy, and having a non-Heder education Appendix Sixteen Regressions of Israeli occupational prestige on freedom from family responsibilities, western language primacy, and having a non-Heder education
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Appendix Seventeen Characteristics of development towns Appendix Seventeen Characteristics of development towns
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Appendix Eighteen Ethnic and Immigrant Makeup of Development Towns and Other Areas In 1961; Male Heads of Household Only, All Years and Ages of Immigration Appendix Eighteen Ethnic and Immigrant Makeup of Development Towns and Other Areas In 1961; Male Heads of Household Only, All Years and Ages of Immigration
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Appendix Nineteen Regression of average Israeli prestige of town residents (town as unit of analysis) on location type, average education, and prestige abroad of residents Appendix Nineteen Regression of average Israeli prestige of town residents (town as unit of analysis) on location type, average education, and prestige abroad of residents
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Appendix Twenty Israeli occupations; all Jewish men in the labor force by veteran status (%) Appendix Twenty Israeli occupations; all Jewish men in the labor force by veteran status (%)
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Appendix Twenty-One Equations Testing Effects of Location Type and Human Capital Variables on Prestige in Israel, by Country of Origin Appendix Twenty-One Equations Testing Effects of Location Type and Human Capital Variables on Prestige in Israel, by Country of Origin
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Appendix Twenty-Two Effect of Human Capital on Israeli Occupational Prestige by Settlement Type, Controlling for Region, Secular Education, and Speaking a Western Language (Moroccans Only) Appendix Twenty-Two Effect of Human Capital on Israeli Occupational Prestige by Settlement Type, Controlling for Region, Secular Education, and Speaking a Western Language (Moroccans Only)
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Appendix Twenty-Three Statistical Significance of Association Between Residence and Language Appendix Twenty-Three Statistical Significance of Association Between Residence and Language
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Appendix Twenty-Four Equations from the logistic regression of the likelihood of matriculating based on father's education (ED), father's occupational prestige in Israel (PA), mother's education, and number of siblings, for sons born in 1954 to men who arrived in Israel between 1948 and 1958, ages of 20–60 Appendix Twenty-Four Equations from the logistic regression of the likelihood of matriculating based on father's education (ED), father's occupational prestige in Israel (PA), mother's education, and number of siblings, for sons born in 1954 to men who arrived in Israel between 1948 and 1958, ages of 20–60
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Appendix Twenty-Five Employers and Jewish teachers in 1961 by immigrant status and ethnicity Appendix Twenty-Five Employers and Jewish teachers in 1961 by immigrant status and ethnicity
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Cite
'Appendices', Shifting Ethnic Boundaries and Inequality in Israel: Or, How the Polish Peddler Became a German Intellectual (Redwood City, CA , 2008; online edn, Stanford Scholarship Online, 20 June 2013), https://doi.org/, accessed 19 Apr. 2024.
Subject
Race and Ethnicity
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