Dissertations

This web page includes dissertations to which Statistics Netherlands (CBS) contributed, either directly through funding or indirectly through substantive supervision by CBS staff. Dissertations in which CBS only facilitated the use of CBS data are not included.

dissertations

  1. Essays on the organizational context of mental health disorders
  2. Separation risks of married and cohabiting couples: How important is the social context?
  3. Human capital migration from a life course perspective: The role of geography and gender
  4. Counting the uncounted
  5. Density estimation by neural networks
  6. Regional resilience and interconnectedness: A multilevel approach
  7. Measuring is knowing? Eliciting preferences in the general population
  8. Multinational firms and local workers
  9. When moving matters: Unpacking patterns and consequences of childhood residential mobility
  10. The productivity puzzle, management practices and leadership
  11. Together we stand: The impact of gender equality in the workplace on employees and firms in the Netherlands
  12. Economic uncertainty in the life course: The couple perspective
  13. Improving predictions of response propensities for effective Adaptive Survey Design (ASD)
  14. Citizenship in context: Naturalisation and residential environment of immigrants in the Netherlands
  15. Gender inequalities in health at older ages: A longitudinal and comparative investigation across European countries
  16. Essays on migration, flexible labour markets and firm performance
  17. State space methods for official statistics and climate modelling
  18. Native born but not yet citizen: Citizenship and education outcomes of the children of immigrants in the Netherlands
  19. Non-standard employment: Prospect or precarity?
  20. Power dynamics at work: An ethnography of a multilingual metal foundry in the Dutch-German borderland
  21. Misclassification bias in statistical learning
  22. The intergenerational transmission of educational attainment after divorce and remarriage
  23. Constructing behaviour profiles for answer behaviour across surveys
  24. Cause-of-death statistics in public health and epidemiology: Exploring new applications
  25. Measurement error: Estimation, correction, and analysis of implications
  26. Correcting survey measurement error with big data from road sensors through capture-recapture
  27. Offshoring, functional specialization and economic performance
  28. Consistent estimates for categorical data based on a mix of administrative data sources and surveys
  29. Globalization, international trade and the risk position of the firm: Empirical evidence from Belgium and the Netherlands
  30. Extracting actionable information from microtexts
  31. Pushing the boundaries for automated data reconciliation in official statistics
  32. Mortality forecasting in the context of non-linear past mortality trends: An evaluation
  33. Counting for EU enlargement? Census-taking in Croatia, Bosnia and Macedonia
  34. The citizenship premium: Immigrant naturalisation and socio-economic integration in the Netherlands
  35. Diffusion and risks of house prices in the Netherlands
  36. Editing and estimation of measurement errors
  37. Productivity, innovation and wage policies in family firms: Empirical evidence from Belgium and the Netherlands
  38. Participation in context: Contextual and individual determinants of political participation in Europe and the Netherlands
  39. An application of population size estimation to offcial statistics: Sensitivity of model assumptions and the effect of implied coverage
  40. The use of advanced transportation monitoring data for official statistics
  41. Time series modelling in repeatedly conducted sample surveys
  42. Motivation in business survey response behavior: Influencing motivation to improve survey outcome
  43. Restrictive imputation of incomplete survey data
  44. Does internationalization foster firm performance?
  45. Informed design of mixed-mode surveys: Evaluating mode effects on measurement and selection error
  46. Optimal resource allocation in Adaptive Survey Designs
  47. Reconciling theory and practice in environmental accounting
  48. Improving survey fieldwork with paradata
  49. Early school-leaving in the Netherlands
  50. Nonresponse in sample surveys: Methods for analysis and adjustment
  51. Accounting for tourism: The Tourism Satellite Account (TSA) in perspective
  52. Innovation and performance: A collection of microdata studies
  53. Difficult groups in survey research and the development of tailor-made approach strategies
  54. Imputation of restricted data: Applications to business suveys
  55. The hunt for the last respondent: Nonresponse in sample surveys
  56. Accounting for goods and for bads: Measuring environmental pressure in a national accounts framework
  57. Quality aspects in price indices and international comparisons: Applications of the hedonic method
  58. Processing of erroneous and unsafe data
  59. Free and fair elections in the OSCE-Region? The development of a measurement tool (in Dutch)
  60. Cognitive laboratory experiences: On pre-testing computerised questionnaires and data quality
  61. Design and analysis of experiments embedded in complex sample surveys
  62. Empirical studies on consumer price index construction
  63. Discrete models for survey data
  64. Computational aspects of survey data processing
  65. Eigenvalue techniques for qualitative data
  66. Some empirical models for markets in disequilibrium
  67. Working with non-response (in Dutch)
  68. Municipal population development in stages: A typology and its application (in Dutch)
  69. Industrial price formation
  70. Tax incidence: A general equilibrium approach
  71. Minimum problems in physics and economics (in Dutch)