[PDF] Top 20 Volume 12 - Article 6 | Pages 107–140
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Volume 12 - Article 6 | Pages 107–140
... Building on three distinct temporal primitives - tick, granule and instant - we suggest a unified timestamp with explicit precision and unambiguous textual representation emphasizing h[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 12 | Pages 325–362
... to 6 (second stage of tertiary education), are ...and 6–6); eduHYPER – hypergamy, the female partner has a lower education level than the male partner (woman’s education given in ISCED number is ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 12 | Pages 293–360
... Table 6 provides an overview of partnership status around the time of the first birth for women born between 1941 and 1967 based on the FFS survey conducted in ... See full document
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Volume 6 - Article 12 | Pages 325–354
... The structure of the demographic database at the National Statistical Institute and the availability of the personal identification number (PID) allow for linking various demo- graphic e[r] ... See full document
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Volume 41 - Article 12 | Pages 331–366
... Parameters were assessed using the most recent cycle (2012) of PIAAC survey data. In this survey the respondents’ literacy proficiency is measured along a continuous scale ranging from 0 to 500, where a higher score ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 12 | Pages 307–318
... observations in the 5 counties with a weather station are included. (6): Unclustered robust standard errors. (7): Standard errors are clustered at the county level. (8): Eq. 1 estimated by a Probit regression. ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 9 | Pages 197–236
... Obviously any projection will be sensitive to the estimation in these countries, which are also among the most populous in the world. Because they concentrate a large share of the world population, China (1.28 billion ... See full document
42
Volume 12 - Article 8 | Pages 173–196
... Table 6 indicates for each work plan chosen in 1957, the percent choosing the various 1964 options. The most significant point visible from this table is that the most common answer for almost all of the ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 4 | Pages 77–104
... The second part of the analysis involves differentiating the Mexican-Origin population by nativity and generational status. Subdividing the Mexican-Origin population allows us to determine if more time in the U.S. ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 12 | Pages 301–322
... As result of distance, large proportions of caretakers are forced to spend many hours to get to the nearest health facility and this is particularly the case in Samfya. Table 6 shows this. Whereas in Kawambwa the ... See full document
24
Volume 8 - Article 5 | Pages 107–150
... A life history survey like the FFS is very useful in presenting the patterns of demographic life courses and comparing them across countries and cohorts. With very little variation, the definition of a coresidential ... See full document
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Volume 16 - Article 5 | Pages 121–140
... Similarly, age and sex distributions of the age of partners were derived from the same survey. Mean and standard deviation of partners’ age were fitted for each age and sex pair, from which normal distributions were ... See full document
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Volume 21 - Article 12 | Pages 341–366
... We study the dynamics for large lattices and present our results mostly for city size N = 100. Figures 2-7 are all based on N = 100. In the last section, we discuss the cases N = 50 and N = 200, and show that N greater ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 7 | Pages 141–172
... I thus feel that Chandra Sekar’s ‘exclusive effect’ given by equation (1.7) can be considered a viable alternative to the present United Nation’s (1985) formula for the following reasons[r] ... See full document
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Volume 20 - Article 12 | Pages 253–278
... On the other hand, immigrants coming from developed countries are quite different, with high levels of education, significant proportions of people who have come to Spain to retire, an[r] ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 10 | Pages 237–272
... This result can be obtained by a decline (over age) in the related parameter of the logarithmic rate of aging (parameter B in Model 2) or by an age-related decline in intensity of exte[r] ... See full document
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Volume 15 - Article 12 | Pages 347–400
... Encyclopedia, 2004; Lee and Moss, 1995; Haynes, 1991). Bulls (males) are sexually mature at about 11 to 12 years of age, but they typically are not allowed to mate until around age 30 years. Elephant cows ... See full document
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Volume 22 - Article 12 | Pages 289–320
... This study analyzed how shocks in cohort-level early life conditions, as represented by deviations from trend in mortality at age 0 (infant mortality) and at ages 1-5 (early childhood [r] ... See full document
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Volume 24 - Article 12 | Pages 257–292
... The method standardizes for variations in the duration of residence or age composition of immigrant groups, attainments possessed by different groups when first observed after entry, a[r] ... See full document
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Volume 23 - Article 12 | Pages 335–364
... The rates, means and standard errors of each of the independent variables are presented in terms of the ethnicity variable (Table 1). Of the 7,851 women who are included in the analysis in the 2002 period (infecund ... See full document
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