[PDF] Top 20 Volume 15 - Article 5 | Pages 105–146
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Volume 15 - Article 5 | Pages 105–146
... being positively and significantly associated with educational level for women but not for men. This result confirms the hypothesis that higher qualifications also allow greater reside[r] ... See full document
44
Volume 37 - Article 15 | Pages 455–492
... No statistically significant differences exist in the transition to second childbirth among rural SES groups (Table 5), while for higher-than-third-order children, sharecroppers and farmers maintain their primacy ... See full document
40
Volume 15 - Article 14 | Pages 413–434
... size of bars corresponding to coefficients larger and smaller than 1. Figure 2 shows that mortality variation is enormous within the group of smaller primates. Mortality rates vary by a factor of nearly eight between ... See full document
24
Volume 16 - Article 15 | Pages 469–492
... Married men with a cancer of any form, diagnosed at any time, had a divorce rate that was eight percent lower (odds ratio (OR) 0.92, 95 % confidence interval (CI) 0.88-0.97) than that of men without a cancer diagnosis ... See full document
26
Volume 17 - Article 15 | Pages 441–464
... It is quite generally recognised that most people who have a good social and economic status are highly desirous of maintaining it and will strive hard to prepare their children to maintain a similar status. Likewise, as ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 15 | Pages 455–502
... Despite their increased presence in the labour market, mothers continue to reconcile work and family by engaging in part-time work, and often only after children have entered school. Relative to other European countries, ... See full document
50
Volume 41 - Article 15 | Pages 425–460
... children, and some socioeconomic characteristics of the spouse, such as gross income in 2010 and retirement status. The highest level of education attained is measured according to the International Standard ... See full document
38
Volume 23 - Article 5 | Pages 105–116
... Cox proportional hazards regression model estimates show that, after controlling for socio- demographic characteristics and initial health status, the total resilience score and most f[r] ... See full document
14
Volume 38 - Article 15 | Pages 335–372
... In recent years, much of the focus in monitoring child mortality has been on as- sessing changes in the under-5 mortality rate (U5MR), which refers to the number of deaths before the age of 5 per 1,000 live ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 15 | Pages 455–500
... Socioeconomic groups were defined by the occupation of the head of household, which could be the mother, father, or, in rare circumstances where the child was adopted by another member of the family, another relative ... See full document
48
Volume 33 - Article 15 | Pages 425–450
... 2009). 5 Distortions in empirical estimates of the gender ratio can also arise from the restricted age range to which these apply (often 15 −49) because the female-to-male ratio of prevalent infections is ... See full document
28
Volume 32 - Article 4 | Pages 107–146
... In the cohorts included in this analysis most people left school at the statutory minimum age (14 or 15 from 1947 to 1972) and proportions with advanced secondary or tertiary education were very low. We therefore ... See full document
42
Volume 29 - Article 5 | Pages 105–132
... a 5-year period before the last observation, 74% of all moves made among those who died and only 69% of all moves made among survivors took place within three years before the last ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 6 | Pages 129–146
... The fixed-effect model also provides regression estimates for each country. Figure 5 compares fixed-effects model estimates with observed trends in three sub-Saharan countries: Kenya, Malawi, and Ghana. Each ... See full document
20
Volume 15 - Article 4 | Pages 61–104
... Table 2 C illustrates the effects of parental relationship on a child’s propensity to dis- play behavioral problems at age one. Ordinary least squares regressions are estimated for the continuous behavioral problems ... See full document
46
Volume 35 - Article 15 | Pages 399–454
... The false positive rate (or type 1 error rate) (Gravetter and Wallnau 2002) measures the increase in the number of erroneous statistical test results that occur due to the omission of a last age interval variance ... See full document
58
Volume 34 - Article 15 | Pages 421–450
... aged 15–24 initiated their first union by living with their partner without any marital ceremony, compared to less than 5% among those of the same age in 1980 (Calvès, Kobiané, and Martel ... See full document
32
Volume 15 - Article 15 | Pages 435–460
... Turkey has experienced intensive social and economical change since the early 20 th century. The size and structure of its population have changed along with alterations of society. Turkish population trends can be ... See full document
28
Volume 5 - Article 5 | Pages 125–186
... of 15 and 25, for instance, for the 1960-61 birth cohort compared to earlier ones, and then the broadening of the distance between the curves of ages 25 and ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 15 | Pages 431–458
... With regard to the separate items of joint lifestyles, the differences between union types reveal the same pattern, except for visiting family, in which cohabiters with marriage intentio[r] ... See full document
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