[PDF] Top 20 Volume 36 - Article 36 | Pages 1039–1080
Has 10000 "Volume 36 - Article 36 | Pages 1039–1080 " found on our website. Below are the top 20 most common "Volume 36 - Article 36 | Pages 1039–1080 ".
Volume 36 - Article 36 | Pages 1039–1080
... 1) Our main hypothesis is that soil type is a measure of farm-level agricultural productivity and hence of nutritional status for the farmers’ children; i.e., children of individuals own[r] ... See full document
44
Volume 36 - Article 52 | Pages 1601–1636
... We explore whether women’s paid employment is associated with reductions in women’s stated son preference in India and whether these results vary by employment sector (agriculture, manuf[r] ... See full document
38
Volume 36 - Article 5 | Pages 145–172
... Contrary to the US and European countries where unmarried cohabitation is widespread (Dykstra and Poortman 2010; Kalmijn 2011; Ono 2003), the prevalence of non-marital unions is very low[r] ... See full document
30
Volume 36 - Article 17 | Pages 525–556
... This article systematically evaluates the quality of periodic fertility measures in the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) for a large set of ... See full document
34
Volume 36 - Article 37 | Pages 1081–1108
... This paper leverages longitudinal household/family roster data from the Malawi Longitudinal Survey of Families and Health (MLSFH) to estimate the effect of ART availability in public cli[r] ... See full document
30
Volume 36 - Article 58 | Pages 1785–1812
... Finally, the models with an interaction effect between the source of income and relationship type shed light on the last hypothesis (vi): “Opportunity theory, which states that participa[r] ... See full document
30
Volume 36 - Article 57 | Pages 1759–1784
... The census data is analyzed at multiple spatial scales: the household, building, face block, street segment, segment group (including adjacent interconnected streets), and extended segme[r] ... See full document
28
Volume 36 - Article 56 | Pages 1721–1758
... 5 Although a wide literature has addressed the challenges that young people face in their transitions from education to work and marriage in MENA (Amer 2014, 2015; Assaad, Binzel, and G[r] ... See full document
40
Volume 35 - Article 36 | Pages 1079–1100
... They treat their property as an endowment and this is a useful segue into prospect theory, whose point of departure from the rational expectations model lies with the fact that people[r] ... See full document
24
Volume 36 - Article 2 | Pages 41–72
... We show how this model could be used to estimate the reporting probabilities of intentional abortions by each individual in addition to the overall average reporting rate.. Individua[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 36 - Article 3 | Pages 73–110
... We see from the main effect of parental breakup that parental separation has a slight negative effect on the probability of university graduation when the CDR is 0, which is t[r] ... See full document
40
Volume 36 - Article 1 | Pages 1–40
... The second aim was to investigate the variation in mortality risks, thereby providing insight into the factors that affected the health of the population in question. More specifically, [r] ... See full document
42
Volume 36 - Article 23 | Pages 691–728
... The postponement of first childbirth has been occurring in most European countries for some decades now. In France, Portugal, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Norway, for example, the mean age of women at first childbirth ... See full document
40
Volume 36 - Article 22 | Pages 659–690
... Biological children also possess an educational advantage among maternal/double orphans, and in the same group, children who are relatives of the household head have the lowest probabili[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 36 - Article 51 | Pages 1549–1600
... Note : 95% Confidence Intervals reported. See Table 1 for sample descriptions... Table A-1: Total fertility rate response to structural, economic, and financial uncertainty indicators. [r] ... See full document
54
Volume 34 - Article 36 | Pages 1037–1052
... For migrants aged 25‒29 years at arrival, there is a large increase in rates of childbearing in the first two years following arrival for women migrating from Pakistan and Bangladesh[r] ... See full document
18
Volume 36 - Article 50 | Pages 1515–1548
... Villavicencio and David 2000; Miller 2008; Jacob 2013). “Children conceived or born out of a void or annulled marriage are considered illegitimate and an amended birth certificate indicating the new civil status of the ... See full document
36
Volume 36 - Article 12 | Pages 371–390
... In other ways, however, a demographer’s life has become more complicated. The life course of mid-20 th -century America used to be commonly characterized as an unwavering linearity of courtship, followed by marriage, and ... See full document
22
Volume 36 - Article 10 | Pages 307–338
... We also examined whether gaps in migration rates across couple types are due to differences in women’s work hours. We do not have this information for Sweden, and therefore we did analys[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 36 - Article 13 | Pages 391–426
... Although researchers often propose a high level of work ‒ family incompatibility for women as an explanation for the postponement of marriage and parenthood in Japan and elsewhere (Bolin[r] ... See full document
38
Related subjects