Lorenzo D'Hooge

Lorenzo D'Hooge

PhD

About

8
Publications
684
Reads
How we measure 'reads'
A 'read' is counted each time someone views a publication summary (such as the title, abstract, and list of authors), clicks on a figure, or views or downloads the full-text. Learn more
42
Citations
Citations since 2017
7 Research Items
42 Citations
2017201820192020202120222023051015
2017201820192020202120222023051015
2017201820192020202120222023051015
2017201820192020202120222023051015
Introduction

Publications

Publications (8)
Article
Full-text available
Recent insights have shown subjective status to impact health and health behavior. It is however unclear how this exactly happens. In this study we explore two mechanisms: this of a direct, mediating effect of subjective status explaining the impact of material class on health outcomes and behavior and an indirect, moderating impact on the relation...
Data
Material class and subjective social status regressed on Unhealthy Behaviors including control variables. (PDF)
Data
Descriptives of the ELSA and Whitehall II-sample. (PDF)
Data
Material class and subjective social status regressed on the separate health biomarkers with control variables. (PDF)
Article
The traditional approach to class voting has largely ignored the question whether material class positions coincide with subjective class identification. Following Sosnaud et al. (2013), this study evaluates party preferences when Europeans' material and subjective social class do not coincide. Seminal studies on voting behavior have suggested that...
Article
Objective class, subjective class identification and voting behavior in the Netherlands The traditional approach to class voting has largely ignored the question whether ‘objective’ class membership coincides with ‘subjective’ class identification. Following Sosnaud et al. (2013) and D’Hooge et al. (2015), this study evaluates party preferences in...

Network

Cited By

Projects

Project (1)
Project
In this PhD-project I focus on the sources and outcomes of class discordance. This phenomenon refers to non-coinciding material and subjective social positions. The first working paper focusses on the factors influencing this mismatch while further papers focus on the consequences this has for political, cultural and health behavior and outcomes.