3 datasets found
  1. P

    TuGebic Dataset

    • paperswithcode.com
    Updated May 1, 2022
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    Jeanine Treffers-Daller and; Ozlem Çetinoğlu (2022). TuGebic Dataset [Dataset]. https://paperswithcode.com/dataset/tugebic
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    Dataset updated
    May 1, 2022
    Authors
    Jeanine Treffers-Daller and; Ozlem Çetinoğlu
    Description

    TuGebic is a corpus of recordings of spontaneous speech samples from Turkish-German bilinguals, and the compilation of a corpus called TuGebic. Participants in the study were adult Turkish and German bilinguals living in Germany or Turkey at the time of recording in the first half of the 1990s. The data were manually tokenised and normalised, and all proper names (names of participants and places mentioned in the conversations) were replaced with pseudonyms. Token-level automatic language identification was performed, which made it possible to establish the proportions of words from each language.

  2. d

    Data from: German Socio-Economic Panel

    • dknet.org
    • neuinfo.org
    • +2more
    Updated Jul 31, 2024
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    (2024). German Socio-Economic Panel [Dataset]. http://identifiers.org/RRID:SCR_013140
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    Dataset updated
    Jul 31, 2024
    Description

    A wide-ranging representative longitudinal study of private households that permits researchers to track yearly changes in the health and economic well-being of older people relative to younger people in Germany from 1984 to the present. Every year, there were nearly 11,000 households, and more than 20,000 persons sampled by the fieldwork organization TNS Infratest Sozialforschung. The data provide information on all household members, consisting of Germans living in the Old and New German States, Foreigners, and recent Immigrants to Germany. The Panel was started in 1984. Some of the many topics include household composition, occupational biographies, employment, earnings, health and satisfaction indicators. In addition to standard demographic information, the GSOEP questionnaire also contains objective measuresuse of time, use of earnings, income, benefit payments, health, etc. and subjective measures - level of satisfaction with various aspects of life, hopes and fears, political involvement, etc. of the German population. The first wave, collected in 1984 in the western states of Germany, contains 5,921 households in two randomly sampled sub-groups: 1) German Sub-Sample: people in private households where the head of household was not of Turkish, Greek, Yugoslavian, Spanish, or Italian nationality; 2) Foreign Sub-Sample: people in private households where the head of household was of Turkish, Greek, Yugoslavian, Spanish, or Italian nationality. In each year since 1984, the GSOEP has attempted to re-interview original sample members unless they leave the country. A major expansion of the GSOEP was necessitated by German reunification. In June 1990, the GSOEP fielded a first wave of the eastern states of Germany. This sub-sample includes individuals in private households where the head of household was a citizen of the German Democratic Republic. The first wave contains 2,179 households. In 1994 and 1995, the GSOEP added a sample of immigrants to the western states of Germany from 522 households who arrived after 1984, which in 2006 included 360 households and 684 respondents. In 1998 a new refreshment sample of 1,067 households was selected from the population of private households. In 2000 a sample was drawn using essentially similar selection rules as the original German sub-sample and the 1998 refreshment sample with some modifications. The 2000 sample includes 6,052 households covering 10,890 individuals. Finally, in 2002, an overrepresentation of high-income households was added with 2,671 respondents from 1,224 households, of which 1,801 individuals (689 households) were still included in the year 2006. Data Availability: The data are available to researchers in Germany and abroad in SPSS, SAS, TDA, STATA, and ASCII format for immediate use. Extensive documentation in English and German is available online. The SOEP data are available in German and English, alone or in combination with data from other international panel surveys (e.g., the Cross-National Equivalent Files which contain panel data from Canada, Germany, and the United States). The public use file of the SOEP with anonymous microdata is provided free of charge (plus shipping costs) to universities and research centers. The individual SOEP datasets cannot be downloaded from the DIW Web site due to data protection regulations. Use of the data is subject to special regulations, and data privacy laws necessitate the signing of a data transfer contract with the DIW. The English Language Public Use Version of the GSOEP is distributed and administered by the Department of Policy Analysis and Management, Cornell University. The data are available on CD-ROM from Cornell for a fee. Full instructions for accessing GSOEP data may be accessed on the project website, http://www.human.cornell.edu/che/PAM/Research/Centers-Programs/German-Panel/cnef.cfm * Dates of Study: 1984-present * Study Features: Longitudinal, International * Sample Size: ** 1984: 12,290 (GSOEP West) ** 1990: 4,453 (GSOEP East) ** 2000: 20,000+ Links: * Cornell Project Website: http://www.human.cornell.edu/che/PAM/Research/Centers-Programs/German-Panel/cnef.cfm * GSOEP ICPSR: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/studies/00131

  3. h

    The Psychological Impact of Torture and State Repression in Türkiye between...

    • heidata.uni-heidelberg.de
    tsv
    Updated Jul 8, 2024
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    Estella Alejandra Tambini Stollwerck; Estella Alejandra Tambini Stollwerck; Ilkem Sarikaya; Kathrin Yen; Hans-Christoph Friederich; Hans-Christoph Friederich; Christoph Nikendei; Christoph Nikendei; Ilkem Sarikaya; Kathrin Yen (2024). The Psychological Impact of Torture and State Repression in Türkiye between 2015 and 2018: Reports from Turkish Refugees Seeking Asylum in Germany [Data] [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.11588/DATA/7O6QZO
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    tsv(844)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jul 8, 2024
    Dataset provided by
    heiDATA
    Authors
    Estella Alejandra Tambini Stollwerck; Estella Alejandra Tambini Stollwerck; Ilkem Sarikaya; Kathrin Yen; Hans-Christoph Friederich; Hans-Christoph Friederich; Christoph Nikendei; Christoph Nikendei; Ilkem Sarikaya; Kathrin Yen
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Germany, Türkiye
    Description

    Torture seeks to undermine not only the physical and emotional well-being of an individual, but to damage the coherence of entire communities. Thus, torture and state repression are used to weaken entire subpopulations. After the failed coup d'état in Türkiye in 2016 and during the subsequently following state of emergency that lasted until 2018, allegations of torture and other degrading treatment in Türkiye spread widely. Since then, the number of asylum-seekers in Germany has risen considerably. This paper analyses the reports of twenty Turkish citizens that fled to Germany to seek asylum in the aftermath of the events. In semi-structured interviews held in Turkish, we assessed the experiences of torture and state repression, psychological consequences, and the current well-being and living situation. All interviewees described illicit violence of state authorities and government supporters, especially while under arrest. Though the methods varied, there was a constant pattern of imbalance of power. The psychological impact of these methods were present after relocation to Germany and included signs of PTSD, anxiety disorders, and major depression. The reports of torture, state repression, and their psychological impact emphasise the importance for policy makers to address the prevention of human rights violations and support the needs of survivors.

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Jeanine Treffers-Daller and; Ozlem Çetinoğlu (2022). TuGebic Dataset [Dataset]. https://paperswithcode.com/dataset/tugebic

TuGebic Dataset

A Turkish-German Bilingual Code-Switching Corpus

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6 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
May 1, 2022
Authors
Jeanine Treffers-Daller and; Ozlem Çetinoğlu
Description

TuGebic is a corpus of recordings of spontaneous speech samples from Turkish-German bilinguals, and the compilation of a corpus called TuGebic. Participants in the study were adult Turkish and German bilinguals living in Germany or Turkey at the time of recording in the first half of the 1990s. The data were manually tokenised and normalised, and all proper names (names of participants and places mentioned in the conversations) were replaced with pseudonyms. Token-level automatic language identification was performed, which made it possible to establish the proportions of words from each language.

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