[PDF] Top 20 Volume 39 - Article 2 | Pages 33–60
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Volume 39 - Article 2 | Pages 33–60
... In the next step, we explore whether it is common that fathers who stayed home longer with the child also perform a greater share of the childcare when both parents are back at work. In Table 1, the constant is –0.91 ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 44 | Pages 1241–1256
... Nearing age 40, half of the individuals were in what we call “stable childbearing unions” – in either their first (41%) or second (8%) union in which they became first- time parents. Again, the only gender difference was ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 48 | Pages 1297–1332
... The insistence on the role of spatial mobility, which was new at the time, and the use of the term ‘mobility transition’ in the title is the origin of a frequent misunderstanding of Zelinsky’s work. His paper is not just ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 35 | Pages 1015–1034
... Figure 2 depicts the strength of the correlation between women’s educational attainment and literacy in each of the 31 countries, illustrating one of the study’s main findings: women’s educational attainment and ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 36 | Pages 1035–1046
... Figure 2 shows cause-specific rates of excess mortality, and highlights the concurrent nature of epidemic mortality from different causes. Two categories, tuberculosis and diarrheal causes, consistently make up ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 34 | Pages 985–1014
... Model 2 (Table 3), the odds of being in a union for the first time showed no statistically significant difference according to worship services or Mass ...hypothesis 2 of the current ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 42 | Pages 1165–1210
... (NUTS 2), but the Italian regions are grouped into Northwest, Northeast, Center, and South and Islands, because the EU-SILC database only gives information for Italian regions at the NUTS 1 ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 40 | Pages 1137–1152
... Besides socio-demographic data on each household member and on the household (family structure, economic conditions, geographical area of residence), the survey provided information on the geographical distance and ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 38 | Pages 1067–1104
... Potential confounders are included in the empirical model to net out spurious elements of the association between earnings and first birth probability. Being enrolled in full-time education reduces earned income (as less ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 33 | Pages 927–942
... decades? 2) Do the changes in divorce patterns vary by sex? and 3) What are the implications of these changes in divorce risk on the outcomes of recently formed marriages? ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 33 | Pages 951–984
... Wave 2 were new respondents, in these countries we can expect the levels of transfers to be marginally lower, given that the reference period is 12 months rather than the approximate 30 months between waves that ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 37 | Pages 1047–1066
... The results of the multinomial logistic regression are shown in Table 2. The dependent variable has four categories, with the most represented category “no participation” as the reference group. Three models are ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 33 | Pages 897–910
... This research moves forward the literature on place-based mortality disparities in two areas: (1) testing for persistence of poor health in place, and (2) identifying geographic disparities based on ... See full document
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Volume 25 - Article 2 | Pages 39–102
... The discrepancies observed in Figure 3 may also be due to misspecifications in the CCMPP. For example, our results are based on the assumption of a flat trend in HIV incidence, which may be unrealistic and erroneously ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 2 | Pages 39–62
... Projected age profiles of death rates. Not surprisingly, methods differ substantially in how they project the evolution of age-specific death rates (Figure 1). The Bongaarts’ shifting model, which explicitly assumes age ... See full document
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Volume 10 - Article 2 | Pages 27–60
... In our cohort analysis we have only complete information from those cohorts that were aged 50 or over at the date of the micro census: the cohorts born before 1944. All later cohorts are censored. The latest cohort in ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 32 | Pages 939–950
... For residential location measures, we used region (Northeast, Midwest, South, and West), urbanicity (urbanized area [population > 50,000], urbanized cluster [population > 2500 and <50,000], or rural ... See full document
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Volume 28 - Article 2 | Pages 33–62
... and 2) to compare the variability of intra-urban 5q0 with characteristics of the environment that may be linked to child mortality (housing, vegetation, health care facility ... See full document
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Volume 29 - Article 2 | Pages 33–70
... In recent years, researchers and policy makers have become increasingly interested in the effects of migration and remittances on the development of communities of origin in developing countries (de Brauw and Rozelle ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 2 | Pages 31–64
... (Table 2) show that about two thirds of Swedish-born women had been married at least once by age ...Table 2 cover all immigrants regardless of age at migration to ... See full document
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