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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 9 - Article 2 | Pages 25–40

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Volume 9 - Article 2 | Pages 25–40

Volume 9 - Article 2 | Pages 25–40

... 0.681 2 and 1.938 2 , ...1.811 2 in this ...1.819 2 , and when I include only an individual-level error term with variance ...2.056 2 in the simulation, the estimated variance is 1.946 ... See full document

18

Volume 40 - Article 34 | Pages 975–1014

Volume 40 - Article 34 | Pages 975–1014

... The first logistic regression model examines the odds of residential change in the whole sample (Figure 4 and Table A-1). The main variables of interest are a combined variable of change in partnership status between ... See full document

42

Volume 40 - Article 25 | Pages 693–724

Volume 40 - Article 25 | Pages 693–724

... By the end of the process, three to five independent annotations had been provided for each tweet. Whether each tweet got a gold label was decided by majority voting: At least 60% of the annotators had to agree on the ... See full document

34

Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240

Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240

... Another aspect to take into account is that the date of onset of the TBB varies greatly according to which index is used. Here, the indices with the greatest agreement concerning the date of onset are the TFR and the CBR ... See full document

54

Volume 37 - Article 40 | Pages 1327–1338  

Volume 37 - Article 40 | Pages 1327–1338  

... Bryant’s (2007) analysis that is relevant here, which is focused on the relationship of socioeconomic factors to the timing of the onset of fertility decline, used both alternatives described here, and also a third ... See full document

14

Volume 36 - Article 40 | Pages 1185–1208

Volume 36 - Article 40 | Pages 1185–1208

... education data over time. We chose to show results for the development of educational attainment of the 55- to 59-year-old population, since this is the age group where the greatest change in the labor force ... See full document

26

Volume 40 - Article 10 | Pages 261–278

Volume 40 - Article 10 | Pages 261–278

... Some limitations are inherently linked to our quasi-experimental effect identifica- tion. Most importantly, while the internal validity of our estimates is strong, the external validity (i.e. relevance to other parities ... See full document

20

Volume 35 - Article 40 | Pages 1169–1212

Volume 35 - Article 40 | Pages 1169–1212

... Finally, the correlation between relationship characteristics and partnership trajectory almost completely disappears in the modelling process. This is particularly the case for the length of the relationship. Only ... See full document

46

Volume 40 - Article 8 | Pages 185–218

Volume 40 - Article 8 | Pages 185–218

... Model 2, which includes the current joblessness status, though the magnitude of the effects, as already outlined, is weaker and not statically significant for ... See full document

36

Volume 40 - Article 6 | Pages 121–154 

Volume 40 - Article 6 | Pages 121–154 

... at 9 months old, and who were eligible to receive Child Benefit (a universal child cash welfare benefit) (Plewis et ...were 9 months, and 3, 5, 7, and 11 years ... See full document

36

Volume 40 - Article 28 | Pages 799–834

Volume 40 - Article 28 | Pages 799–834

... In the event-history models, separate regressions are run for male and female research persons as the age at marriage differs considerably between these two groups (see Table 2 below). In the first part of the ... See full document

38

Volume 40 - Article 31 | Pages 897–932

Volume 40 - Article 31 | Pages 897–932

... Job insecurity was not asked about during times of unemployment. For better coherence, we modeled job insecurity as a categorical variable with four categories: (0) employed, job very secure (reference category); (1) ... See full document

38

Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864

Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864

... The raw data for Costa Rica (see Supplementary archive, S1. Raw “Input Data” for Costa Rica) comprises official vital statistics, population estimates, and census counts available online (Centro Centroamericano de ... See full document

32

Volume 40 - Article 30 | Pages 865–896

Volume 40 - Article 30 | Pages 865–896

... Tables 3 to 6 give the results from logit models for participation in childcare and linear regression models for the minutes of active fathers’ involvement. Separate models are presented for physical care and interactive ... See full document

34

Volume 40 - Article 48 | Pages 1413–1440

Volume 40 - Article 48 | Pages 1413–1440

... We find that the main explanatory variables for gender equality and gender equity among couples had small and unexpected effects on the transition to a second birth among the parents with one common child. Couples in ... See full document

30

Volume 25 - Article 2 | Pages 39–102

Volume 25 - Article 2 | Pages 39–102

... This article presents an extension of the cohort-component model of population projection (CCMPP) first formulated by Heuveline (2003) that is capable of modeling a population affected by ... See full document

66

Volume 40 - Article 9 | Pages 219–260 

Volume 40 - Article 9 | Pages 219–260 

... Efforts to improve the accuracy of age data have focused on improving interviewer training, and/or designing questionnaires that facilitate the reporting of age. The DHS program has developed a decision chart to help ... See full document

44

Volume 25 - Article 9 | Pages 311–336

Volume 25 - Article 9 | Pages 311–336

... At the end of the twentieth century Italy was characterized by important economic and demographic changes. Firstly, a large increase of educational attainment was observed. In 1995 the proportion of the population aged ... See full document

28

Volume 40 - Article 2 | Pages 27–48 

Volume 40 - Article 2 | Pages 27–48 

... later article, McDonald (2013) is explicit in that his theories are predictive for the macro-level association between fertility and gender equality and not for couple-level measures of gender ... See full document

24

Volume 27 - Article 2 | Pages 25–52

Volume 27 - Article 2 | Pages 25–52

... Almost all existing studies focused on people’s attitudes towards divorce in general. One could, however, argue that attitudes towards divorce may strongly depend on the conditions under which a divorce occurs. One of ... See full document

30

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