Dr. Pribesh traveled to Munich to give a paper about tips on harmonizing data. Prepared with a group from Brigham Young University, the paper was presented at the Society for Longitudinal and Lifecourse Studies' (SLLS) annual meeting held at Ludwig Maximillain University of Munich. Created with undergraduate students and professors from BYU, the paper discussed harmonizing family structure and social capital variables across three longitudinal, national data sets: MCS (UK), LSAC (AUS), and ECLS-K (US). Harmonizing is the practice of finding commonalities among variables across datasets so that they can be used for cross-national comparisons. They discussed the vagaries of harmonization and the need for structure in it's practice.