The REMESO Longitudinal Database on labour market, migration, firms, school, housing and neighbourhoods
Migration, Welfare and the Political Economy of Labour Market Segmentation
Abstract
The REMESO database is a register-based database that contains information about all individuals, schools, dwellings and companies in Sweden.
The REMESO database is based on Statistics Sweden’s annual registerdata and consists of five parts:
(1) A population register containing information about all individuals who were registered in Sweden as of 31 December for each year;
(2) Longitudinal Integration Database for Health Insurance and Labor Market Studies (LISA);
(3) A business register with information about all economically active companies and organizations in Sweden , whether they belong to the private or public sector;
(4) A school register with information about all elementary schools and upper secondary schools, including student grades;
(5) A real estate register containing microdata administrative and longitudinal information on all properties, buildings, addresses and apartments in Sweden.
Keywords
Social exclusion/inclusion, Welfare, Work,
Publications
Kazlou, Aliaksei & Klinthäll, Martin (2019) ”Entrepreneurial response to changing opportunity structures: Self-selection and incomes among new immigrant entrepreneurs in Sweden.” International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour and Research, Vol. 25, No. 5, pp. 859-879
Klinthäll, Martin & Sundin, Elisabeth (2017) “The Older as Entrepreneurs: A Diversified Group: Illustrated Through Entrepreneurship in Technical Consultancy and Artistic and Literary Work” in Aaltio, I., Mills, A.J. & Helms Mills, J. (eds.), Ageing, Organizations and Management: Constructive Discourses and Critical Perspectives. London: Palgrave Ma
Klinthäll, M., & Urban, S. (2014). Second-generation immigrants in the small-business sector in Sweden. Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies, 12(3), 210-232.
Scarpa, S. (2016). Immigration policy regimes, welfare states and urban inequality patterns: a comparison between Malmö and Genoa. European Urban and Regional Studies. 23:4, 862-877.
Scarpa, S. (2015). The rescaling of immigration and the creation of ‘areas of outsiderness’ in Sweden, Sociologica, 2, 1-23.
Scarpa, S. (2015). The Swedish model during the international financial crisis: institutional resilience or structural change? In S. Romano & G. Punziano (Eds.), The European social model adrift. Europe, social cohesion and the economic crisis (pp. 107-126). Farnham: Ashgate.
Scarpa, S. (2015). The impact of income inequality on economic residential segregation: the case of Malmö, 1991–2010. Urban Studies, 52(5), 906-922.
Scarpa, S. (2013). The emergence of a Swedish ‘underclass’? Welfare state restructuring, income inequality and residential segregation in Malmö, 1991-2008, Economia & Lavoro, 2, 121-138.
Sköld, Birgitta & Klinthäll, Martin, (2015) “Childcare entrepreneurship in Women’s ’own rooms’ ” in Sköld, B. Vad hände?: Kvinnors företagande och de strukturella villkoren – en studie i spåren av den offentliga sektorns omvandling. Linköping: Linköping University Electronic Press.
Sundin, Elisabeth, Holmquist, Carin & Klinthäll, Martin (2019) ”Entrepreneurial dynamics in the third age – a study of trajectories for start-ups by entrepreneurs aged 55 and 60.” in Backman et al. (eds.) Handbook of Research on Entrepreneurship and Aging , s. 143-168. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.