Tobias Wiß
@tobiaswiss.bsky.social
Associate Professor of Political Science at Johannes Kepler University Linz | welfare states | social policy | pensions | family policy | political representation
https://sites.google.com/view/tobiaswiss
https://sites.google.com/view/tobiaswiss
Da ist bei der Verlinkung wohl ein Fehler unterlaufen. Ich war nicht bei der Tagung. Der Vortragende war wohl Tobias Wille 😀
October 30, 2025 at 4:31 PM
Da ist bei der Verlinkung wohl ein Fehler unterlaufen. Ich war nicht bei der Tagung. Der Vortragende war wohl Tobias Wille 😀
Reposted by Tobias Wiß
"Contrary to expectations, European political parties largely fail to respond to extreme weather events by increasing their attention to environmental issues."
@antvalentim.bsky.social @lse-ei.bsky.social for @lseeuroppblog.bsky.social
@antvalentim.bsky.social @lse-ei.bsky.social for @lseeuroppblog.bsky.social
Climate change and politics – insights from the LSE Festival
How does climate change affect politics? António Valentim presents insights from four studies featured at the 2025 LSE Festival exhibition.
blogs.lse.ac.uk
June 19, 2025 at 11:05 AM
"Contrary to expectations, European political parties largely fail to respond to extreme weather events by increasing their attention to environmental issues."
@antvalentim.bsky.social @lse-ei.bsky.social for @lseeuroppblog.bsky.social
@antvalentim.bsky.social @lse-ei.bsky.social for @lseeuroppblog.bsky.social
Understanding these public preferences is crucial for effective and politically feasible pension reforms
June 12, 2025 at 9:24 AM
Understanding these public preferences is crucial for effective and politically feasible pension reforms
We detect feedback effects (having specific pension schemes reinforces preferences for income from those schemes); and we find strong influence of national pension systems (stronger preference for public pension income in Bismarck countries and for occupational pension in Beveridge countries)
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June 12, 2025 at 9:24 AM
We detect feedback effects (having specific pension schemes reinforces preferences for income from those schemes); and we find strong influence of national pension systems (stronger preference for public pension income in Bismarck countries and for occupational pension in Beveridge countries)
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Results show that respondents value public pensions and they would like a substantial income share also from occupational and individual pensions. We find that older and left-leaning individuals favour public pension income, whilst younger and right-leaning support more private pensions.
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June 12, 2025 at 9:24 AM
Results show that respondents value public pensions and they would like a substantial income share also from occupational and individual pensions. We find that older and left-leaning individuals favour public pension income, whilst younger and right-leaning support more private pensions.
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📚 Although pension systems in Europe consist of a mix of public and private pension pillars, we know little about how citizens view this mix. We bridge this gap by analysing individual preferences regarding the mix of public and private pension income.
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June 12, 2025 at 9:24 AM
📚 Although pension systems in Europe consist of a mix of public and private pension pillars, we know little about how citizens view this mix. We bridge this gap by analysing individual preferences regarding the mix of public and private pension income.
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Great news, congratulations
March 5, 2025 at 7:27 PM
Great news, congratulations