LISS panel Grants 2023 Announcement

19 December 2023

The LISS panel Grant call offers financing for data collection via the LISS panel. In the 2023 round of the Call for Proposals we have received 34 applications. In total, 6 regular LISS panel Grants could be funded and two grants for a project that combined the LISS panel data collection with access to the CBS microdata.

The following 8 projects were awarded in the 2023 round of the LISS panel Grant (in alphabetical order by first author).

Typifying rule-followers and rule-breakers: the effect of greed on rule-compliance
Karlijn Hoyer (University of Amsterdam), Lucas Molleman (University of Amsterdam)

Measuring Uncertainty Perception in the Health Domain
Vahid Moghani (Erasmus University Rotterdam); Aurelien Baillon (Emlyon Business School), Francesco Capozza (WZB). This project is extended with the grant for linking the LISS panel data to CBS microdata.

Urban Heat Inequality: Empowering Vulnerable Households in Combating Heat Exposure in their Environments
Maha Moustafa Habib Abdelraouf (TU Delft); Maarten van Ham (TU Delft); Marjolein van Esch (TU Delft)

Gender and Ethnic Differences in Self-presentation Strategies: A Vignette Survey Experiment in Human vs. Automated Recruitment
Huyen Nguyen (Utrecht University); Frank van Tubergen (Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (NIDI)); Valentina Di Stasio (Utrecht University)

Social class: an exploitation-based class scheme
Jaap Nieuwenhuis (University of Groningen); Agata Troost (University of Groningen); Jonathan Mijs (Erasmus University Rotterdam)

Probing the causal pathways between police procedural justice and perceptions of police legitimacy using experimental vignettes
Amy Nivette (Utrecht University); Isabelle van der Vegt (Utrecht University)

Cognitive strengths and deficits in adverse conditions: A balanced view
Stefan Vermeent (Utrecht University); Nicole Walasek (Utrecht University); Willem Frankenhuis (University of Amsterdam). This project is extended with the grant for linking the LISS panel data to CBS microdata.

Does incongruence between civil servants’ and citizens’ socioeconomic status negatively affect how citizens relate to civil servants and local governments? A vignette survey experiment
Vivian Visser (Erasmus University Rotterdam); Willem de Koster (Erasmus University Rotterdam); Jeroen van der Waal (Erasmus University Rotterdam)

The reviewers in this round were: Weverthon Barbosa Machado (UU); Thomas Douenne (UvA); Erika van Elsas (RU); Katya Ivanova (TiU), Jochem Tolsma (RUG/RU). 

Relevant links: