[PDF] Top 20 Volume 8 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30
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Volume 8 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30
... where S x y ( , ) was taken to be | x − y | α (symmetric) and α was taken as 1 and 1.5 in the two models. In particular, S x x ( , ) = 0 . In their model c represented country, not cohort, and it could therefore ... See full document
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Volume 17 - Article 1 | Pages 1–22
... the article I include, where appropriate, a selection of the research results in order to demonstrate the reasons for and effectiveness of the methods I employed to reach certain ... See full document
24
Volume 21 - Article 1 | Pages 1–22
... within 1 km in the same municipality, more than 1 km in the same municipality, within 16 km in another municipality, between 16-50 km in another municipality, more than 50 km or abroad, parents or parents ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 1 | Pages 1–4
... The overview chapters cover the following topics: 1. Contemporary levels and trends of fertility in Europe 2. Changing ultimate-parity distribution and family size 3. Birth regulation (contraception and induced ... See full document
6
Volume 18 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... Our second hypothesis predicted that women who engage in a large share of household labour (>75%) would have lower fertility intentions. In the first model, we see no significant difference between the two groups of ... See full document
28
Volume 15 - Article 1 | Pages 1–20
... exceed 30-40% when the ICC dips below ...approximately 1/10 of the PSUs that have the largest within-PSU variance in education - the precise selection criterion being a standard deviation larger than ... See full document
22
Volume 16 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... Although demographic rates are social facts of the most compelling kind, although “culture” and “population” offer contrasting concepts of social structure, and although the theoretica[r] ... See full document
28
Volume 27 - Article 1 | Pages 1–24
... metropolitan areas were chosen from each of the five quintiles of ordered sales prices. The selected metropolitan areas ranged from Toledo, Ohio, with the lowest median sales price of $92,000, to San Francisco, with a ... See full document
26
Volume 23 - Article 1 | Pages 1–40
... Table 1 presents the distribution of adults aged 18-79 in France according to their couple ...at 1%, while the proportion of people having a second residence where they live alone is estimated at 3% (not ... See full document
42
Volume 14 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... age 30 is indicated by e 30 or by CAL 30 , or equivalently, whether life expectancy would stabilize at e 30 (t) or CAL 30 (t) if mortality conditions stopped changing after time t ... See full document
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Volume 13 - Article 1 | Pages 1–34
... Clearly if the principal policy objective is to integrate poor families into middle-class neighborhoods, that objective is undermined if there is a large net exodus of middle- class neighbors. Hence, we view the policy ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... The binary regressions for the main variables indicated that, after other factors are controlled for, mothers who were older and whose youngest child was older were less likely to report the intention to have another ... See full document
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Volume 32 - Article 1 | Pages 1–28
... Given the absence of pronatalism and the established influence of religion on demographic behaviors in Buddhism, in this study we examine whether Buddhist follower[r] ... See full document
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Volume 12 - Article 1 | Pages 1–28
... All in all, the study has established that a woman’s educational attainment, premarital sexual activity, premarital childbearing, type of place of residence, region of residence, relig[r] ... See full document
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Volume 10 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... Other studies have shown that much of the difference in mortality between highly and poorly educated men in Russia is due to the high mortality from cardiovascular diseases in the latter group and, to a lesser extent, ... See full document
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Volume 7 - Article 1 | Pages 1–14
... This article focuses on level-1 vs. level-2 explanations. We present a new method for decomposing change in a population average into two components, one capturing the ef- fect of direct change and the ... See full document
16
Volume 22 - Article 1 | Pages 1–28
... Since research on extra-marital relations is notoriously fraught with respondent misreporting, Table 2 explores the reliability of these data. In the second wave conducted in 2001, husbands were also asked whether they ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 1 | Pages 1–40
... Descriptive statistics reveal that the occupational structure of the Tartu population was dominated by manual workers, who accounted for over three-fifths of the gainfully employed; the second largest group was comprised ... See full document
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Volume 35 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30
... The hazard regression models for union formation transitions use age groups as the baseline. Women become at risk of union formation at the age of 15, and age is categorized as under 20, 20‒24, 25‒29, 30‒34, ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30
... ber 1, ...September 1, 1939 (the region ceded by the Soviet Union in 1940 (Karelia) is treated as a separate county even though those territories originally belonged to the same county as the part of ... See full document
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