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Article 4

Volume 3 - Article 4

Volume 3 - Article 4

... The crude effects on risk of divorce of the predisposing variables (duration of marriage, bride’s and groom’s previous marital status, groom’s education and household wealth, bride’s fer[r] ...

20

Volume 21 - Article 4 | Pages 75–108

Volume 21 - Article 4 | Pages 75–108

... present article, we focus on the answers to these specific questions: "Are you currently having a stable, intimate relationship with someone you're not living with?," "Are you living apart because you ...

36

Volume 34 - Article 4 | Pages 109–142

Volume 34 - Article 4 | Pages 109–142

... One limitation of most prior studies of this issue is that they have used cross-sectional data: these studies are thus incapable of identifying the events in young adults’ life course[r] ...

36

Volume 33 - Article 4 | Pages 93–112

Volume 33 - Article 4 | Pages 93–112

... Three of them already have a longer tradition in fertility research but draw on general models of human action (economic family theory, value of children theory, theory of planned beh[r] ...

22

Volume 38 - Article 4 | Pages 109–126

Volume 38 - Article 4 | Pages 109–126

... In Table 5, Model 1 shows that participation in an ICT screen-viewing activity was not related to BMI for men in urban areas, and this pattern remains after controlling for SES indicators (Model 2). Model 3 shows that ...

20

Volume 36 - Article 4 | Pages 111–144 

Volume 36 - Article 4 | Pages 111–144 

... Studying data from national time use surveys conducted in the United States, France, and Spain, we extract information about who undertakes certain activities in order to examine three t[r] ...

36

Volume 37 - Article 4 | Pages 53–100 

Volume 37 - Article 4 | Pages 53–100 

... A descriptive overview suggests a degree of country clustering (Figure 1). In one cluster we find the Mediterranean countries (Italy, Portugal, Spain, and Greece), with high rates of male and female singlehood. This is ...

50

Volume 39 - Article 4 | Pages 95–135

Volume 39 - Article 4 | Pages 95–135

... Figure 18: Estimated male SMAL from OLS model with proportion of males in service after exiting the parental home as the predictor, England and Wales, 1881.. Source: Schürer and Woolla[r] ...

43

Volume 40 - Article 4 | Pages 61–94

Volume 40 - Article 4 | Pages 61–94

... Figure 4 shows results from the same models using a different migration status variable which distinguishes between G1 groups of different regions of birth and duration of stay (full results shown in numerical ...

36

Volume 41 - Article 4 | Pages 83–102

Volume 41 - Article 4 | Pages 83–102

... this article, we contribute to the lifespan variation literature by deriving the thresh- old age a H for the lifetable entropy ...Section 4 we empirically show that it differs from the threshold age of e † ...

22

Volume 2 - Article 4

Volume 2 - Article 4

... The drop in first births has been particularly strong among women under 30. As we see in Figure 4, first-birth rates at these ages have followed each other remarkably closely. At each age, the rates declined until ...

28

Volume 20 - Article 4 | Pages 11–36

Volume 20 - Article 4 | Pages 11–36

... Women’s employment increases their independence and, as a result, the risk of marital disruption, whether by overthrowing traditional marriage norms, by facilitating divorce[r] ...

28

Volume 24 - Article 4 | Pages 113–144

Volume 24 - Article 4 | Pages 113–144

... The illustration of the crossover in life expectancy observed in the HMD data suggests that socio-cultural, economic, and political factors that influence the intermediate factors that shape the mortality patterns in ...

34

Volume 23 - Article 4 | Pages 73–104

Volume 23 - Article 4 | Pages 73–104

... Panel 1 shows that while individuals from the higher and middle classes on average attained the highest occupational status at marriage, their prospects in life were the most influence[r] ...

34

Volume 22 - Article 4 | Pages 95–114

Volume 22 - Article 4 | Pages 95–114

... Fig. 4; for the Ukraine, see Perelli-Harris 2008, Figure 5; for an investigation with particularly clear results, see Koytcheva 2006, who studied patterns for first and second births in Bulgaria in her Chapter ...

22

Volume 19 - Article 4 | Pages 47–72

Volume 19 - Article 4 | Pages 47–72

... The principal reasons for the relatively high levels of childlessness among the cohorts born around 1900, and among those of the 1960s, were very different. Quite large proportions of women born in the late 19 th and ...

28

Volume 16 - Article 4 | Pages 97–120

Volume 16 - Article 4 | Pages 97–120

... To take another example that will be discussed later in this paper, medical reports in the 1920s already pointed out the suspected links between tobacco and cancers, and a 1938 article in the journal Science ...

26

Volume 35 - Article 4 | Pages 81–116

Volume 35 - Article 4 | Pages 81–116

... In our analysis, the result of significant beta convergence without significant sigma convergence indicates that even though overall regional mortality differences have not declined, [r] ...

38

Volume 15 - Article 4 | Pages 61–104

Volume 15 - Article 4 | Pages 61–104

... Three models based on the aforemen- tioned general specification ( 1 ) are estimated: Model ( 1 ) estimates the overall association of marriage between the biological parents within the [r] ...

46

Volume 1 - Article 4

Volume 1 - Article 4

... longevity is the lack of appropriate data. At the same time, many existing data resources (millions of genealogical records) are under-utilized, because their very existence is not widely known, let alone the quality and ...

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