Conference Programme
7. July 2009
The parallel sessions in the morning (Session A, D, G) have three presentations to be presented in one hour and a half. The parallel sessions in the afternoon (Session B, C, E, F, H) have four presentations to be presented in two hours. Therefore we have 30 minutes for each paper with 20 minutes presentation and 10 minutes discussion. Thus, there is no longer a differentiation between short and long presentations.
Presenters will find a computer and a projector for a slide presentation. IATUR 2009 - Some Tips for Presenters.pdf
Chairs, in principle the last presenter of a session, are kindly invited to be in the room ten minutes before the beginning of the session to ensure the respect of the schedule. IATUR 2009 - Some Tips for session chairs.pdf
Poster presentations will be from 18.00 to 19.00 on Thursday. Presenters of posters are kindly invited to give the poster to organizers at the registration on Wednesday morning and to be in the Lecture Hall Corridor next to their posters at 17.50 on Thursday. A poster presentation allows a max 60 cm x 80 cm (~DIN A1) poster to be displayed permanently.
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Wednesday 23. September |
Thursday 24. September |
Friday 25. September |
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8.00 - 9.00 |
Arrival & Registration Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
Arrival & Registration Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
Arrival & Registration Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
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9.00 - 10.30 |
Opening & Plenary Session 1 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 |
Plenary Session 2
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Plenary Session 3
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10.30 – 11.00 |
Coffee Break Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
Coffee Break Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
Coffee Break Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
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11.00 - 12.30 |
Parallel Sessions A |
Parallel Sessions D |
Parallel Sessions G |
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12.30 - 13.30 |
Lunch Venue: University Cafeteria |
Lunch Venue: University Cafeteria |
Lunch Venue: University Cafeteria |
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13.30 - 15.30 |
Parallel Sessions B |
Parallel Sessions E |
Parallel Sessions H |
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15.30 – 16.00 |
Coffee Break Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
Coffee Break Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
Coffee Break Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
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16.00 – 18.00 |
Parallel Sessions C |
Parallel Sessions F |
IATUR Business Meeting Venue: Lecture Hall 1 |
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18.00 - 19.00 |
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Poster Presentation Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor |
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20.00 – open |
Welcome reception Venue: Medieval Town Hall of Lueneburg |
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Medieval Conference Dinner Venue: Brewery „Krone“ |
Saturday 26 September, 2009 Post Conference Tour: Elbe River and Vicinity
Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany, Campus, Lecture Halls, Scharnhorststr. 1
www.leuphana.de/ffb/iatur2009
Saturday 26 September, 2009 Post Conference Tour: Elbe River and Vicinity
Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany, Campus, Lecture Halls, Scharnhorststr. 1
Wednesday 23 September 2009 Programme
8:00 – 9:00 Arrival & Registration
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“), Leuphana University Lüneburg
9:00 – 9:30 Opening
Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Sascha Spoun (President Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany)
Roderich Egeler (President Federal Statistical Office, Germany)
Michael Bittman (President IATUR, University of New England, Australia)
Joachim Merz (Director Research Institute on Professions (FFB), Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany)
9:30 – 10:30 Plenary Session 1 Time Use, Money, Environment
Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Joachim Merz
Michael Bittman (University of New England, Australia)
The
Balance Between
Parents’ Time and Money in Raising Children – A preliminary Study
of Outcomes of alternative Policy Regimes
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Lydia E. Gerharz (University of Münster, Germany), Miranda Loh (National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland) and Aileen Yang (Norwegian Institute for Air Research, Norway)
Using
European Time Use Data for Modelling Individual Exposure to Air
Pollution
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10:30 – 11:00 Coffee Break
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“)
11:00 – 12:30 Parallel Session A
A1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: Rana Hendyy
Market and Domestic Work
José Ignacio Gimenez Nadal and José Alberto Molina (University of Zaragoza, Spain)
The Effects of Unemployment on Time Use:
Individual and Household Approaches
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Tatyana Karahanova (Institute of Sociology of Russian Academy of Science Moscow, Russia)
Tendencies in Russian Urban Population’s Time-Use: 1986-2007/08
Rana Hendy (University of Paris, France)
Rethinking the Division of Labor within Egyptian Households: Market versus Domestic Work
A3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Jane Greve
Parental Time
Margo Hilbrecht (University of Waterloo, Canada) and William Michelson (University of Toronto, Canada)
School
Year/Summer Differences in Parents’ Time
Use: A “new” Look at Seasonal Influences
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Jane Greve and Jens Bonke (Rockwool Foundation Research Unit, Denmark)
Children’s Lifestyle and Parents’ Employment
A4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Ragni Hege Kitterød
Gender
Randi Kjeldstad (Division for Social and Demographic Research Statistics, Norway)
Underemployment
in a Gender Perspective: Concepts and Causes
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Oriel Sullivan (CTUR, Oxford University, UK)
Changing Differences in the
Division of Domestic Labor and Child Care by Educational Attainment
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Ragni Hege Kitterød and Marit Rønsen (Division for social and demographic research, Statistics Norway)
Untraditional
Couples in a Neo-Traditional Setting: Which Women Perform as much
Paid Work as their Partner?
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A5 Venue: Lecture Hall 5 („Hörsaal 5“)
Chair: Andreas Knabe
Time and Poverty
Indira Hirway (Centre For Development Alternatives, India)
Time Poverty: Issues Related to Concept and Measurement
Burça Kızılırmak (Ankara University, Turkey) and Emil Memis (Ankara University, Turkey and the Levy Economics Institute, U.S.A.)
The Unequal Burden of Poverty on Time Use
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Andreas Knabe and Ronnie Schöb (Freie Universität Berlin, Germany), Steffen Rätzel and Joachim Weimann (Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Germany)
Dissatisfied
with
Life, But Having a Good Day: Time-Use and Well-Being of the
Unemployed
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12:30 – 13:30 Lunch
Venue: University Cafeteria („Mensa“)
13:30 – 15:30 Parallel Session B
B1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: Jay Stewart
Health
and Eating
Sibyl Kleiner and Eliza K. Pavalko (Indiana University Department of Sociology, U.S.A.)
Double
Time: Couples’ Work Hours and Health in the United States
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Karen S. Hamrick, Margaret Andrews and Joanne Guthrie (U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, U.S.A.)
Eating & Health Module: Data, Eating Patterns
and Obesity, and Food Assistance Programs
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Joshua C. Pinkston and Jay Stewart (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S.A.)
How Does Time Use Affect the Likelihood of
Becoming Obese?
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B3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Roger Patulny
Social
Aspects
Elsa Fontainha (ISEG-Technical University of Lisbon, Portugal) and Marta Varanda (ICS/University of Lisbon, Portugal)
Inter-disciplinary
Communication Flows Between Scientific Domains
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Boris Kragelj (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia) and Ignace Glorieux (University Brussels)
Bridging the Gap between Sociology of Time and Time Use Research
Elizabeth Becker and Matt Barnes (National Centre for Social Research, London, UK)
Investigating Participation as a Means to Promoting Social Inclusion: New Findings from the UK Time Use Survey
Roger Patulny (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Ex-Household Social Isolation Amongst Retired Men
and Women
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B4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Christian Bredemeier
The
Timing of Paid Work
Sachiko Kuroda (The University of Tokyo, Japan) and Isamu Yamamoto (Keio University, Japan)
When
Do People Work? Measuring Trends in Work Timing
with a Japanese Time-Use Survey
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Man Yee Kan (University of Oxford, UK) and Laurent Lesnard (CNRS & SciencesPo., France)
Comparing
Working Time Patterns
of France 1998-99 and UK 2000-01: Results from Two-stage Optimal
Matching Analyses
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Jean-Yves Boulin (Université Paris Dauphine, France)
Sunday’s Working: A new Structuration of our Times (and Lives) ?
Christian Bredemeier and Falko Jüßen (Technische Universität Dortmund, Germany)
The
Cross-Sectional Dimension of the Rise in Married Women’s Labor
Supply
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B5 Venue: Lecture Hall 5 („Hörsaal 5“)
Chair: Eva Österbacka
Mothers,
Children and Human Capital
Marianne Janes (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S.A.)
Examining Differences in Single and Married Mothers’ Time Use in the American Time Use Survey
Anke Möser (Center for international Development and Environmental Research, Justus Liebig University, Germany), Susan E. Chen (Department of Agricultural Economics, Purdue University, U.S.A.) and Rodolfo M. Nayga (Department of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness, University of Arkansas, U.S.A.)
The
Effect
of Maternal Employment on Time Use of Mothers and their Children
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Sayyid Salman Rizavi (University of Paris 1 (Pantheon-Sorbonne), France) and Catherine Sofer (University of Paris 1 (Pantheon-Sorbonne), Paris School of Economics, France)
The Third
Partner in the Household: An Analysis of Children’s Household Work
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Eva Österbacka (Åbo Akademi University, Finland), Joachim Merz (Research Institute on Professions (FFB), Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany) and Cathleen D. Zick (University of Utah, U.S.A.)
Human Capital Investments in
Children: A Comparative Analysis of the Role of Parent-Child Shared
Time in Selected Countries
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15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“)
16:00 – 18:00 Parallel Session C
C1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: Lyn Craig
Family,
Children and the Elderly
Noam Shoval (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)
Use of GPS Technology for Measuring Timing and Distance of Outdoor Activity of Elderly People with Different Levels of Cognitive Functioning
Glenn Stalker (York University, Canada)
Emerging
Life-course Disparities and Equalities in Leisure: A Comparative
Analysis of Leisure Time in Canada, the United Kingdom and the United
States
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Anne Roeters (Utrecht University, Department of Sociology/ ICS, Netherlands)
Buffers
in the Relationship Between
Parental Work Demands and Time with Children in Europe: A
Crossnational Comparison
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Lyn Craig and Killian Mullan (Social Policy Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Australia)
Family
and (Family-) Free Time in Comparative Perspective
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C3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Rainer Hufnagel
New
Media, Internet and Shop Opening Hours
Odd Frank Vaage (Statistics Norway, Norway)
Mass Media Use Among Persons
Immigrated
to Norway Compared to the General Population
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John P. Robinson and Steven Martin (University of Maryland, U.S.A.)
IT Use and Declining Social Capital? More Cold Water from the General Social Survey (GSS) and the American Time-Use Survey (ATUS)
Stéphanie Grossmann & Rainer Hufnagel (University Münster, Germany)
Who Uses Extended Shop Opening Hours in Germany? - An Empirical Investigation
C4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Kornelius Kraft
Gender
International
Evrim Altintas (Centre for Time Use Research, University of Oxford, UK)
Gender Differences in Time Use Patterns in Turkey from a Comparative Perspective
Tae Hee Kwon (School of Economics Sungkyunkwan University, Korea)
Gender, Time Allocation and Inequality in Korea
Kornelius Kraft (TU Dortmund, IZA, ZEW, Germany) and Stefanie Neimann (TU Dortmund, Ruhr Graduate School in Economics, Germany)
Labor
Division
between Wife and Husband and the Risk of Divorce: New Evidence for
Germany
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C5 Venue: Lecture Hall 5 („Hörsaal 5“)
Chair: James E. Pratt
Paid
Work and Working Arrangements
Eugen Spitznagel (Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung (IAB) der Bundesagentur für Arbeit, Germany)
Working Hours in Germany –
Measurement
Concept and Some Empirical Results
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Ralph Kattenbach (University of Hamburg, Germany)
The Right
to Part-Time: Practical Implications from the Managerial Point of
View
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James E. Pratt and David L. Kay (Cornell University, U.S.A.)
Jobs, Good Paying Jobs, and
Services
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20:00 – open Welcome Reception
Venue: Medieval Town Hall of Lüneburg (“Rathaus”)
Location: see map on the end of the page
Thursday 24 September 2009 Programme
8:00 – 9:00 Arrival & Registration
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“), Leuphana University Lüneburg
9:00 – 10:30 Plenary Session 2 New Approaches in Time Use Research
Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Michael Bittman
Duncan Ironmonger and Faye Soupourmas (The University of Melbourne, Australia)
Using
Time Use Episode Data to Estimate Household Production Outputs
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Joachim Merz and Tim Rathjen (Research Institute on Professions (FFB), Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany)
Time and Income Poverty Dynamics - An
Interdependent Multidimensional Approach with German Time Use Data
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Walter Van Dongen (Research Centre of the Flemish Government (SVR), Belgium)
A
New Basic Theory of Time and Human Activities in a Complex World and
Some Major Consequences for Time Use Research
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10:30 – 11:00 Coffee Break
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“)
11:00 – 12:30 Parallel Session D
D1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: Barbara S. Winter
Youth
Azeema Faizunnisa (University of Hawaii at Manoa, U.S.A.)
What You Do Now is What You Become: A Study on Human Development Activities of Youth of Pakistan
Barbara S. Winter (RWI Essen, Germany)
The Effect
of Student Time Allocation on Academic Achievement
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D3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Jennifer Baxter
Time
Poor and Time Rich
Stella Chatzitheochari and Sara Arber (University of Surrey, UK)
Time Poverty in the UK: Identifying Society’s ‘Time Poor’ and Examining their Lifestyle
Omar Ismael Abdourahman (United Nations Economic and Social Council, Ethiopia)
African Centre for Gender and Social Development
(ACGS) Time Poverty: A Contributor to Women’s Poverty?
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Jennifer Baxter (Australian Institute of Family Studies, Australia)
Too
Much Spare Time?
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D4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Hans G. Bloemen
Intra-Household
Time Allocation
Julia Bredtmann (Ruhr-Universität Bochum and RWI Essen, Germany)
The
Intra-household Division of Labor: How
Do German Couples Allocate their Time?
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Anna Laura Mancini and Silvia Pasqua (University of Torino, Italy)
Asymmetries and
Interdependencies in Time Use
Between Italian Spouses
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Hans G. Bloemen
(Free University Amsterdam, Netherlands)
and
Elena G. F. Stancanelli
(University
Cergy Pontoise, France)
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How Do Spouses Allocate Time: The Effects of Wages and Income
12:30 – 13:30 Lunch
Venue: University Cafeteria („Mensa“)
13:30 – 15:30 Parallel Session E
E1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: James E. Pratt
Macroeconomic
Accounting
Georgeta-Marinela Istrate (National Institute of Statistics, Romania) and Nicoleta Hrehorciuc-Caragea (Ecologic University of Bucharest, Romania)
The
Significance of the Individual Time for Economic and Social
Development
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Johanna Varjonen (National Consumer Research Centre, Finland)
Repertoires
of Household Production in
Different Income Levels
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Kristiina Aalto and Johanna Varjonen (National Consumer Research Centre, Finland)
Changes in Household Production in Finland from
2001 to 2006
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James E. Pratt and David L. Kay (Cornell University, U.S.A.)
Value to Whom? Short-run Valuation of Household
Production Time from a National Perspective
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E3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Jiri Zuzanek
Time
Crunch and the Quality of Leisure
Nadine M. Schöneck (University of Bremen, Germany)
High
Speed Society? Hartmut Rosa’s Theory of Social Acceleration
Confronted with Empirical Results
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Theun Pieter van Tienoven, Ignace Glorieux, Joeri Minnen and Ilse Laurijssen (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Research Group TOR, Belgium)
The Harried Versus the Equanimous Leisure Class in Contemporary Society – Analyzing Patterns of Leisure Time Consumption Using Time-Use Surveys
Kimberly Fisher (CTUR, Oxford University, UK), Jose Ignacio Gimenez Nadal (University of Zaragoza, Spain) and Almudena Sevilla Sanz (CTUR, Oxford University, UK)
Re-examining
Free Time: Time Crunch in the U.S.A.
1965-2003
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Jiri Zuzanek and Roger Mannell (University of Waterloo, Canada)
Time
Crunch
and Stress: Cumulative and Instantaneous Connotations of Time Use
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E4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Andrew S. Harvey
Travel
William Michelson (University of Toronto, Canada)
Variations
in the Rational Use of Time: Trips to and from Work
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Martin Lohmann (Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany)
Changing Consumer Behaviour
Time Allocation - Time Use
Patterns for Holiday-Trip-Taking in Different Senior Cohorts
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Marie-José Olde Kalter and Lucas Harms (KiM Netherlands Institute for Transport Policy Analysis, Netherlands)
Changing
Travel
Patterns of Women
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Andrew S. Harvey and Saleh AmirKhalkhali (Saint Mary’s University, Canada)
On Modeling Travel Behavior Using Cross-Country Time-Use Data: A Varying Coefficients Approach
15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“)
16:00 – 18:00 Parallel Session F
F1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: Kimberly Fisher
Happiness,
Well-being and the Quality of Life
Maria Clelia Romano and Daniele Spizzichino (Italian National Statistical Institute, Italy)
Daily Time Use and Quality of Life
Karma Galay (The Centre for Bhutan Studies, Bhutan)
Using Time Use as an Indicator of Happiness
Kimberly Fisher (CTUR, University of Oxford, UK)
Barking
Mad or on the Road
to Purr-fection: Consideration of the Quality of Life Exhibited in
the Daily Activities of People Who Interact with Pets in the United
Kingdom
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F3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Jouko Nätti
Care
Giving
Arianna Waye and Janet Fast (University of Alberta, Canada )
The Impact of Caregiving on Personal Time Schedules: Trade-Offs between Time Spent Caring and Personal Activities
Masago Fujiwara (The University of Shimane, Japan)
Who Cares for the Elderly at Home in Japan ?
M. Thomas, B. Carter, A. Hunt, M. Hurley and S. Robertson (University of Central Lancashire, UK)
Trapped at Home?
Jouko Nätti (University of Tampere, Finland), Timo Anttila and Tomi Oinas (University of Jyväskylä, Finland)
Informal Care Giving and Time
Use
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F4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Ignace Glorieux
Data
Collection and Quality
Neuma Aguiar, Arnaldo Mont’Alvão and Luiz Neubert (Federal University of Minas Gerais, Brazil)
Comparing
Questionnaire and Diaries to Estimate the Amount of Time Spent by the
Population to Perform Housework, Paid Work and to Commute Using
Official Statistics and a Time Use Survey in Brazil
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Jens Bonke and Peter Fallesen (Rockwool Foundation Research Unit, Denmark)
The
Impact of Incentives
and Interview Methods on Response Quantity and Quality in Diary and
Booklet Based Surveys
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Heather Dryburgh, Marcel Béchard, Anna Kemeny and Paul Hartung (Statistics Canada, Canada)
Canada’s General Social
Survey (GSS) on Time Use: Time Stress and Well-being, Lessons
Learned Collecting Simultaneous Activity
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Joeri Minnen and Ignace Glorieux (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Research Group TOR, Belgium)
Weekly Work Time Patterns in Belgium: Standard and Flexible
F5 Venue: Lecture Hall 5 („Hörsaal 5“)
Chair: Norbert Neuwirth
Work
Life Balance
Ingrid Ooms, Jedid-Jah Jonker & Ab van der Torre (Netherlands Institute for Social Studies (SCP), Netherlands)
Working and Well-Doing.
Choosing between Paid and Unpaid Labour
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Maria (XinQing) Zou (University of Toronto, Canada)
Duration
and Frequency of Commuting: Links to Subjective Feelings
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Norbert Neuwirth (Austrian Institute for Family Studies, University of Vienna, Vienna)
Work-Life-Balance
Reconsidered – A Time Use Approach
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18:00 – 19:00 Poster Presentation
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“)
Eugenijus Bagdonas, Jolita Ramanauskienė and Vytautas Skvernys (Kaunas University of Technology, Lithuania)
Are
Students Really Overloaded?
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Luis del Barrio (Eurostat, Luxembourg), Iiris Niemi (Statistics Finland, Finland) and Maria Clelia Romano (Italian National Statistical Institute, Italy)
The 2008 Harmonised European Time Use Survey
(HETUS) Guidelines
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Jennifer Baxter (Australian Institute of Family Studies, Australia) and Julie Smith (Australian Centre for Economic Research on Health, The Australian National University, Australia)
Breastfeeding and Infants’ Time Use
David Bishai (Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health. Baltimore, U.S.A.) and Omaima El Gibaly (Assiut University, Egypt)
Anachronism: Developing Strategies to Measure Time Use in Egyptian Households Without Clocks or Watches
Stella Chatzitheochari and Sara Arber (University of Surrey, UK)
Analyzing Individual, Household and Area Effects on Sleep Duration: A Multilevel Analysis of Time Use Data from the 2000 UK Time Use Survey
Kimberly Fisher, Jonathan Gershuny and Evrim Altinas (CTUR, University of Oxford, UK)
Updated Comparative Time Use Data Resources: The Multinational Time Use Study and the American Heritage Time Use Datasets
Indrani Hazarika (Dubai Women’s College, United Arab Emirates)
Unpaid Work by a Business Organization is a Social Responsibility of Business
Christina Inbakaran (Department of Transport, Australia) and Marie-Louise van der Klooster (Deakin University, Australia)
Communication and Marketing of a National Time Users Group – e.g. Travel Time
Joachim Merz, Kristina Kaske and Tim Rathjen (Research Institute on Professions (FFB), Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany)
The New Research Network on Time Use (www.rntu.org)
Joachim Merz (Research Institute on Professions (FFB), Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany), Andrew Harvey (Saint Mary’s University, Canada) and Jonathan Gershuny (CTUR, Oxford University, UK)
electronic International Journal of Time Use Research (www.eijtur.org)
Hannu Pääkkönen and Paavo Väisänen (Statistics Finland, Finland)
The Finnish Time Use Survey 2009–2010
Kleanthis Sirakoulis (Technological Education Institute of Larissa, Greece) and Alex Deffner (University of Thessaly, Greece)
Youth Leisure in Medium Size Cities: The Case of Lasriisa and Volos, GREECE
Carol Soloff and Jennifer Baxter (Australian Institute of Family Studies, Australia)
LSAC Parent-Complete Time Use Diaries for Children’s Activities
Carol Soloff (Australian Institute of Family Studies, Australia)
LSAC Computer-Administered Child Diaries
M. Thomas, B. Carter, A. Hunt, M. Hurley and S. Robertson (University of Central Lancashire, UK)
Development of a 7-Day Time-Use
Diary for Father-Mother Pairs
with a Disabled Preschool Child
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Friday 25 September 2009 Programme
8:00 – 9:00 Arrival & Registration
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“), Leuphana University Lüneburg
9:00 – 10:30 Plenary Session 3 Preparing for the Future of Time Use Research
Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Manfred Ehling
Weekly Work Grid/ Weekly Diary:
Joeri Minnen and Ignace Glorieux (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Research Group TOR, Belgium)
Quality
of Time-Use Data –
Comparing the 2-day Time-Use Diary and the Weekly Work Grid
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John P. Robinson (University of Maryland, U.S.A.)
The Value of the Weekly Time Diaries – A Working Group
HETUS 2:
Luis del Barrio (Eurostat, Luxembourg), Iiris Niemi (Statistics Finland, Finland) and Maria Clelia Romano (Italian National Statistical Institute, Italy)
The
Second Wave
of the Harmonised European Time Use Surveys
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10:30 – 11:00 Coffee Break
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“)
11:00 – 12:30 Parallel Session G
G1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: Rania Antonopoulos
Time
Poverty and Health
Koen Breedveld and Stephanie Mulleneers (WJH Mulier Instituu, Netherlands)
Too
Busy to Stay Healthy?
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Rania Antonopoulos (The Levy Economics Institute, U.S.A.) and Emel Memis (Ankara University, Turkey and the Levy Economics Institute, U.S.A.)
Time and Poverty
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G3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Rainer Hufnagel
Methodological Issues
Kimberly Fisher (CTUR, University of Oxford, UK)
Profiling
Low
Quality Diaries Collected in Surveys Included in the Multinational
Time Use Study
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Jorge González Chapela (University of Alicante, Spain)
Analysis of Variance in the Use of Time
Rainer Hufnagel (WWU Münster, Germany)
On the Topology of Time Use Sequences
G4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Kristin Dale
Working, Household Production and Well-being
Joachim R. Frick, Markus M. Grabka and Olaf Groh-Samberg (SOEP at DIW Berlin, Germany)
The Impact of Home Production on Economic
Inequality in Germany
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Tindara Addabbo (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy), Antonella Caiumi (Istituto di Studi e Analisi Economica, Italy) and Anna Maccagnan (University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, Italy)
Unpaid Work, Well-Being
and the Allocation of Time in Italy
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Kristin Dale (University of Agder, Norway)
Lower Wage Rates when Occupational Studies Increase Household Productivity? A Household Productivity Explanation for the Wage Gap Between Nurses and Engineers
G5 Venue: Lecture Hall 5 („Hörsaal 5“)
Chair: Guliz Mugan
Geography and Space
Kajsa Ellegård (Linköping University, Sweden)
Behind
the Activity Patterns – A Look at Regional Variations
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Valeria Esquivel (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, Argentina)
The
Analysis of Parent’s Daily Work Rhythms
in the City of Buenos Aires
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Guliz Mugan and Feyzan Erkip (Bilkent University, Turkey)
The
Impact of Space and Time-Use
on the Perception and Experience of Incivility
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12:30 – 13:30 Lunch
Venue: University Cafeteria („Mensa“)
13:30 – 15:30 Parallel Session H
H1 Venue: Lecture Hall 1 („Hörsaal 1“)
Chair: Gert G. Wagner
New Time Use Survey Technologies
Mikael Molén and Petter Wikström (Statistics Sweden, Sweden)
Experiences from Interviewing
and Instructing the Respondents by Using two Different Approaches
i.e. Telephone and Face-to-Face
– A
Descriptive Analysis of the Previous Time Use Survey in Sweden
2000/01
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Bernhard Engel and Stefanie Best (German Television ZDF, Germany)
Media Convergence and Fragmentation – The End of
Media Diaries?
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Maria Clelia Romano and Tania Cappadozzi (Italian National Statistical Institute, Italy)
The
Coding
Process in Time Use Surveys: The Italian Experience
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Michaela Riediger (DIW Berlin, Germany), Florian Schmiedek (DIW Berlin, Humboldt University, Germany), Ulman Lindenberger and Gert G. Wagner (DIW Berlin, Berlin University of Technology, Germany)
Mobile Phones as Assessment Instruments: New Ways to Implement Experience Sampling Methodology in Survey Research
H3 Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
Chair: Peter Brown
Work Life Balance and Satisfaction
Minna Ylikännö (Social Insurance Institution of Finland, Finland)
Employees’
Satisfaction
on the Balance between Work and Leisure in Finland, Sweden, Norway
and Denmark - Time Use Perspective
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Nathalie Georges, Dominique Méda and Danièle Trancart (CEE, France)
Couples’ Work Schedules, Satisfaction and Work and Family Balance
Kobayashi Toshiyuki (JAPAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION, Broadcasting Culture Research Institute, Japan)
Working Mothers who Feel “Fun”, Even During their “Busy” Days
Peter Brown (Griffith University, Australia)
Happiness under Pressure: The Importance of ME in Time Among Dual-Earner Parents
H4 Venue: Lecture Hall 4 („Hörsaal 4“)
Chair: Evrim Altintas
Policy
Jayoung Yoon (Korea Labor Institute, Korea)
Social Policies and Parental Time
Carlijn Kamphuis and Andries van den Broek (The Netherlands Institute for Social Research/SCP, Netherlands)
Similar Countries, Differences in Time Use
Evrim Altintas (CTUR, University of Oxford, UK)
The Effect of Family Policies on Variations in Childcare Patterns in the United States
H5 Venue: Lecture Hall 5 („Hörsaal 5“)
Chair: Jonghee Choi
Paid, Unpaid Work and Children
Ki-Soo Eun (Seoul National University, Korea)
Is There “The Second Shift” for Korean Married Women? Unveiling Paid and Unpaid Family Work by Married Men and Women in Contemporary Korean Society
Noriko Kishi (Fukuoka University of Education, Japan) and Michinori Hirata (Hiroshima University, Japan)
Interrelations
Between Unpaid Work Time of Parents and Children in Japan
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Jonghee Choi (Korea National Statistical Office, Korea)
2009 Time Use Survey in the Republic of Korea
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15:30 – 16:00 Coffee Break
Venue: Lecture Hall Corridor („Hörsaalgang“)
16:00 – 18:00 IATUR Business Meeting
Venue: Lecture Hall 3 („Hörsaal 3“)
IATUR members, guests are welcome.
20:00 – open Medieval Conference Dinner
Venue: Brewery “Krone” (“Brauhaus zur Krone“)
Location: see map on the end of thepage
Shuttle from Leuphana University Lüneburg to hotels lying in the suburban area of Lüneburg, from these hotels to Brewery “Krone” and from Brewery “Krone” to hotels will be organized.
End of Conference
Saturday 26 September 2009 Post Conference Tour
(For more information please visit www.leuphana.de/ffb/iatur2009/post_conference_tour.php .)
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Leuphana University Lüneburg, Campus
Inner City of Lüneburg
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