male migrant
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2021 ◽  
pp. 019791832110373
Author(s):  
Marie-Christine Laible ◽  
Hanna Brenzel

Wage gaps between migrants and natives persist in Germany, and traditional human capital endowments or work environments only partially explain these gaps. This article investigates whether noncognitive skills contribute to explaining male migrant wage gaps in Germany. While the economics literature shows that noncognitive skills affect educational and occupational outcomes, such as gender wage gaps, it is unclear if the same applies to the migrant wage gap. To address this lingering question, we analyze risk preference and the “Big Five Personality Dimensions,” a psychological concept categorizing an individual's personality into five factors. In doing so, we show that male migrants and male German natives differ in their average noncognitive skills and that these skills significantly relate to wages. The results of Oaxaca–Blinder wage decompositions reveal that noncognitive skills significantly contribute six percentage points to explaining the male migrant wage gap in Germany. We conclude that noncognitive skills are important predictors of heterogeneities in labor market outcomes.


2021 ◽  
pp. 135910532110593
Author(s):  
Meng Xiong ◽  
Jiao Chen ◽  
Wendy Johnson

To examine the relationship between relative deprivation and social anxiety, which affects mental health, and investigate the mediating role of perceived control and the moderating role of belief in a just world (BJW) in an understudied population in Asia, we surveyed 1573 rural-to-urban migrant children (48% female; Mage = 12.3, SD = 1.7) in southeast China. Relative deprivation was positively correlated with social anxiety; perceived control partially mediated this connection. Moreover, BJW moderated the indirect effect, which was stronger for male migrant children with lower levels of BJW. The limitations and practical implications of this study are discussed.


F1000Research ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 1033
Author(s):  
Elisa Ruiz-Burga

Background: Since the emergence of HIV and the AIDS pandemic, the majority of risk-reduction interventions have been centred on the use of condoms in sex workers. Methods: This qualitative study recruited 25 male migrant sex workers in London to understand their risk perception and condomless sex experiences within the context of sex work and private life. The data was collected using face-to-face interviews, analysed using thematic analysis, and the findings interpreted through the theory of planned behaviour. Results: The themes explain that condomless sex with clients occurred when participants consciously accepted to perform this service deploying a risk assessment of clients, faulty strategies, and sexual practices to reduce their risk; or when they lost control because of recreational drugs, feeling attraction to clients, in precarious circumstances, or were victims of violence. Conversely, condomless sex with non-commercial partners occurred according to the type of relationship, with formal partners it was rationalised through emotional aspects attached to this kind of relationship, while with casual partners it was connected to sexual arousal and the use of alcohol and drugs.  Conclusions: Reinforce educational interventions to deliver STI-HIV information, enhance the use of condoms, and to address specific contextual factors that facilitate condomless practice with commercial and non-commercial sexual partners.


Author(s):  
Jiaxi Peng ◽  
Jiaxi Zhang ◽  
Zuyu Xia ◽  
Xinze Wang ◽  
Ziweiyi Dan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 159-165
Author(s):  
Kristina Nadrah ◽  
Urška Glinšek Biškup ◽  
Vesna Cvitković Špik ◽  
Manica Müller Premru ◽  
Barbara Šoba

Bacteremia induced by wound myiasis is uncommon and therefore rarely suspected by clinicians when treating patients with neglected wounds. We present a case of <i>Ignatzschineria larvae</i> bacteremia as a complication of <i>Lucilia</i> sp. maggot wound myiasis in a young male migrant. This is the first reported human case of <i>Ignatzschineria</i> bacteremia in Slovenia and one of the 2 described in the literature where the fly larvae infesting the wounds of the patient with <i>Ignatzschineria</i> bacteremia were not only suspected to be <i>Lucilia</i> sp. but also entomologically identified.


2020 ◽  
pp. 107780122096387
Author(s):  
Jorge Rodríguez-Menés ◽  
Ana Safranoff

We test two theories explaining domestic exploitation and violent abuse against women in couples. Exchange theory predicts both to increase when men outpower women; status inconsistency, when women do. As violence and exploitation can affect a couple’s resources, making the model recursive, we focus on native status. Using data from a women’s victimization survey ( N = 8,000), we apply biprobit models to compare violent abuse and domestic exploitation in homogeneous and mixed couples in which one is a migrant. The results validate status inconsistency theory: native women with male migrant partners are less exploited but have the highest risks of being abused.


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