[PDF] Top 20 Volume 9 - Article 7 | Pages 119–162
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Volume 9 - Article 7 | Pages 119–162
... Table 1 presents some relevant cohort characteristics. Most of individuals in the first two cohorts —and partially those in the third one— are above the mandatory retirement age. Thus, we are able to observe the complete ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 9 | Pages 259–284
... preschool (0–4), primary school (5–12), and high school ages (13–17). We also included categories comprising multiple age groups, one comprising couples with all their children between ages 5–12 and 13–17, and another of ... See full document
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Volume 24 - Article 9 | Pages 217–224
... share child care responsibilities more equally, as has been demonstrated in other studies (Sundström and Duvander 2002, Nyman and Petterson 2002). The results of these studies showed that (i) among low-earning couples, ... See full document
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Volume 22 - Article 9 | Pages 199–210
... Studies of the data from each individual country have been provided by Hoem et al. (2009a, 2009b), Matysiak (2009), and Gabrielli and Hoem (2009). Those authors furnish analyses of the patterns of union formation ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 9 | Pages 285–314
... balance; 7) employment opportunities; 8) financial situation; 9) free time (amount); 10) home; 11) neighbourhood; 12) feeling of belonging to the local community; 13) feeling safe; 14) health; 15) ... See full document
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Volume 14 - Article 9 | Pages 157–178
... Of interest for health needs profiling is the disease burden at different ages and how this varies between geographic areas. As noted above the area gradients for illness on age η j1a are more highly correlated with area ... See full document
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Volume 20 - Article 9 | Pages 169–194
... This article documents the levels and trends of childlessness among young adult women in 16 Latin American countries between 1970 and 2000 with data from four waves of population ...The article focuses ... See full document
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Volume 13 - Article 9 | Pages 201–222
... In this same early paper, Bongaarts and Feeney (2002, Eq. 12), introduced a differen- tial equation (originally under Gompertzian assumptions) which agrees to first order with equation (7) of Section 3. They ... See full document
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Volume 7 - Article 7 | Pages 343–364
... Table 6 and Figure 1 summarizes the information gathered from Tables 2 and 4 in that they report the cumulative percent of all children who ever have the experience of living outside a union of their two parents by the ... See full document
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Volume 9 - Article 9 | Pages 197–222
... Instead of examining the trend over time, we analyzed in this pilot study the factors sex and age. They usually received little attention in previous studies, despite their paramount influences on mortality (Rogers et ... See full document
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Volume 7 - Article 9 | Pages 379–390
... In this model, the risk probability of a woman to get divorced depends on the following factors: duration of the marriage, current age, calendar year, whether she was born in Sweden, and[r] ... See full document
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Volume 15 - Article 9 | Pages 289–310
... Further, among the possible combinations of factors, the combination of short fitting period, no adjustment of kt and fitted jump-off rates produced the smallest errors in log death rate[r] ... See full document
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Volume 18 - Article 9 | Pages 263–284
... Vital Statistics and Census data and age-period-cohort models to examine whether cohort fertility patterns are associated with breast cancer mortality rates among wo[r] ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 9 | Pages 197–236
... Applying this model on China can only lead to overestimation in the projection period, whatever the historical trend of this country, simply because its urban definition makes the estima[r] ... See full document
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Volume 17 - Article 9 | Pages 211–246
... However, the low birth rate among the women with low current education who pro- ceed to a higher educational level (and which makes the effects of education at age 39 less positive than [r] ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 9 | Pages 225–248
... Most studies find that, within a decade after their arrival, migrants’ fertility rates decline to the level close to fertility rates among native women (Schoorl 1995; Toulemon and Mazuy 2004). Furthermore, over time ... See full document
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Volume 16 - Article 9 | Pages 249–286
... I find that most of what we can learn from standard fertility models appears to hold once account is taken of unmeasured heterogeneity common to nonmarital fertility and union formatio[r] ... See full document
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Volume 23 - Article 9 | Pages 223–256
... The success of our method in forecasting incomplete cohort fertility might lead us to make a bold suggestion that future research along these lines purely and simply focus on the projection of quantum. In this paper we ... See full document
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Volume 21 - Article 9 | Pages 235–254
... In populations thought not to be affected by migration, the optimal strategy appears to be to apply the General Growth Balance method (fitting to the age range 5+ to 65+) to estimate c[r] ... See full document
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Volume 41 - Article 9 | Pages 231–262
... Therefore we are aiming for three objectives: (1) question the complexity of children’s family environment, taking into account both the morphology of their domestic[r] ... See full document
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