[PDF] Top 20 Volume 39 - Article 3 | Pages 61–94
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Volume 39 - Article 3 | Pages 61–94
... Nevertheless, we are most interested in two specific biases, rWpU and rUpW. The former response pair, rWpU, is much more common than the latter, rUpW (see Table 3). The more common bias, rWpU, occurs when a woman ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 24 | Pages 685–700
... Figure 3 gives a synthetic view of the changes that took place in Niger since the late ...Figure 3 are based on unconditional birth intervals and blend the reproductive experience of women reaching distinct ... See full document
18
Volume 38 - Article 2 | Pages 37–94
... One of the contributions of the present study is precisely its use of a large number of countries over a lengthy historical period. We show that aggregated data (from both the national and the provincial sphere) can lead ... See full document
60
Volume 40 - Article 4 | Pages 61–94
... Our analytical strategy consists in comparing the coefficients assessing migrants’ health advantages across nested models, successively adding our independent variables of interest. A series of methodological papers warn ... See full document
36
Volume 34 - Article 39 | Pages 1075–1128
... locates estimates over time. This makes it possible to estimate a trend in child mortality for a period of about 15 years prior to data collection 3 . Since age of mother is used as proxy for the children’s ... See full document
56
Volume 33 - Article 39 | Pages 1105–1136
... On the basis of H1a and H1b, a ‘selection scenario’ can be envisaged concerning both the track choice (Figure 3, line c) and the probability of dropping out (line d). This scenario is based on the differential ... See full document
34
Volume 37 - Article 39 | Pages 1297–1326
... These connections have not been explored that often. There is a burgeoning lit- erature documenting changes in postapartheid poverty and inequality (Leibbrandt et al. 2010; Leibbrandt, Finn, and Woolard 2012) and living ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 39 | Pages 1149–1184
... The relative risks of one-child mothers having a second child are presented in Table 3. These results show that practically all groups of descendants of immigrants also have lower second-birth fertility than women ... See full document
38
Volume 39 - Article 25 | Pages 701–718
... The law also regulated child-related issues in same-sex partnerships, particularly custody and adoption rights. In this regard the law was initially very restrictive, but was modified in 2005 to allow, for example, the ... See full document
20
Volume 39 - Article 23 | Pages 671–684
... Figure 3 illustrates the relation between log(c) and the life expectancy at birth (center panel), and at age 60 years (right panel), when there is a 30% decrease in the log-linear slope at ages above 85 ...Figure ... See full document
16
Volume 30 - Article 61 | Pages 1653–1680
... hypotheses 3 and 4, the next specification (Model 4 in Table 4) adds a set of cross-level interaction effects between parental divorce and the two contextual ...hypothesis 3, and suggests that the negative ... See full document
30
Volume 39 - Article 41 | Pages 1081–1104
... In Table 6 we display the results from adding the life-cycle factors to our preferred specification from column 3 of Table 2. As we explain in the discussion section below, a caveat of this approach is that these ... See full document
26
Volume 39 - Article 42 | Pages 1105–1150
... Fast 3+ trajectories are especially frequent in Poland, Slow 3+ in Spain, Slow 2 in Greece, and clusters of family histories characterized by high proportions of union dissolutions are more frequent in the ... See full document
48
Volume 39 - Article 44 | Pages 1181–1226
... Implementation was greatly improved for the 2010 Census post-enumeration survey, which sampled 250 out of 37,488 enumeration areas seven months after the census (GSS 2012). The post-enumeration survey found an omission ... See full document
48
Volume 38 - Article 61 | Pages 1885–1932
... Spain, interregional movements are driven by economic determinants, while intraregional migration is more associated with residential preferences typically associated with swings in the housing market (Recaño and Roig ... See full document
50
Volume 8 - Article 3 | Pages 61–92
... The results of the analyses regarding fixed effects are given in Table 2. Age at first sexual intercourse does not have a significant effect, meaning that the credibility interval, given[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 10 - Article 3 | Pages 61–82
... Tobacco-related deaths did not begin to influence the percentage of life remaining until about age 60 for LDS males and females and 45 for non-LDS males and females. This is consistent with the presence of long latency ... See full document
24
Volume 22 - Article 3 | Pages 63–94
... Today and in the coming decades, the children born into this climate of strong son preference are reaching adulthood. According to the United Nations population projections for China, there were 106 men aged 15-49 for ... See full document
34
Volume 11 - Article 3 | Pages 57–94
... analytically. Many studies combine qualitative and quantitative approaches, some to inform the design (and presumably the analysis) of the survey (Biddlecom & Fapohunda 1998, Wolff 2000), others as a complement to ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 61 | Pages 1933–1948
... by 39% between 1975‒1979 and 2005‒2010 in terms of odds ratios (dashed line), instead of the 57% observed in the first model (solid ...the 39% observed in the second model (dashed ... See full document
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