[PDF] Top 20 Volume 37 - Article 15 | Pages 455–492
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Volume 37 - Article 15 | Pages 455–492
... When the age of the woman is controlled for, the risks of having a second child (Table 6a) decrease significantly for all marriage cohorts of sharecroppers and farmers, for the last t[r] ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 37 | Pages 1047–1066
... In recent years this scheme has been slowly opened to include workers in other rapidly growing urban sectors, mainly foreign-funded enterprises, private enterprises, and the self-employed (Zhao and Xu 2002). Under this ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 1 | Pages 1–12
... Births. In order to consistently identify births across census years, we estimate births based on whether a woman of childbearing age (15–45) is in the same household as a child less than one year old. When there ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 19 | Pages 599–634
... Since the onset of the economic crisis there has been a notable decline in immigration flows and in the union formation and fertility of both Spaniards and immigrants (Castro-Martín et al. 2015). Emigration has ... See full document
38
Volume 16 - Article 15 | Pages 469–492
... Cancer among women is not generally more harmful to a marriage than cancer among men, as suggested by some investigators, but there are certain gender differences: whereas colorectal c[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 53 | Pages 1707–1734
... in 15 major cities of eight European countries: Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland (Hornstra, Groenewold, and Lessard-Phillips ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 54 | Pages 1735–1760
... To address this issue I apply a method proposed by Karlson, Holm, and Breen (2012) (KHB), using the khb command in Stata version 15 (StataCorp 2017). To isolate the separate effects of rescaling and confounding, ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 2 | Pages 13–24
... The contribution by Yahirun and Hamplová (2014, SC19‒5) extends existing research by focusing on variations in intergenerational contact between married, cohabiting, and single persons across 15 European ... See full document
14
Volume 37 - Article 57 | Pages 1825–1860
... region dummies, and survey year dummies. We find that part of the January effect is not explained by education and other controls for real wages and formal/informal em- ployment. For real wages, the unexplained gap ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 15 | Pages 455–502
... 1999. 15 In contrast to maternity leave, which has been increasing in length and the generosity of payment, parental leave legislation complies with the minimum required by the EU Directive on Parental Leave, and ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 15 | Pages 455–500
... On the other hand, class differences in airborne disease mortality and perinatal causes continued to exist until the end of observation in 1926, suggesting that these causes may have bec[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 55 | Pages 1761–1792
... Considering that the parents of returned migrants and of nonmigrants experience different risk factors and that return migration may be driven by parents’ adverse physical health, result[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 38 | Pages 1275–1296
... However, the increase in the number of dissolutions of cohabiting unions and the increase in the formation of higher-order cohabiting unions means that total rates of union dissolution a[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 39 | Pages 1297–1326
... sense given our application to household services. But making location central to the definition of the household is less self-evident in the case of NIDS than it is for the Ag- incourt HDSS, particularly since moves are ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 11 | Pages 295–324
... The impact of foreigner fertility on total fertility in Switzerland is clear: It widens the fertility curve and causes the early bulge, although this is now dissipating as the fertility[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 10 | Pages 251–294
... For analyses of perceived risk of HIV infection, women not in the analytic sample were significantly younger, less wealthy, reported a greater number of lifetime sexual partners, and wer[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 56 | Pages 1793–1824
... Since these coefficients may hide the unobserved effects that children have on women’s work productivity (and thus cannot be interpreted as solely reflecting wage discrimination aga[r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 52 | Pages 1695–1706
... Age-specific estimates indicate that the probability of experiencing a three- generation arrangement during a child’s first year of life is 17.6% for Asian, 16.5% for black children, 14.[r] ... See full document
14
Volume 37 - Article 3 | Pages 25–52
... We begin with descriptive analysis, comparing households with current migrants and without current migrants by the main independent variables (had a violence event in the village in the [r] ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 20 | Pages 635–668
... Our interpretation of this result is that, in light of the continuous and steep increase in cohort childlessness rates in Italy among women around and over 40 years old (Figure 3), any p[r] ... See full document
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