[PDF] Top 20 Volume 36 - Article 20 | Pages 609–626
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Volume 36 - Article 20 | Pages 609–626
... While rare in most countries at age 20 (when childbearing may not yet have begun), marriages occurring after a first birth (i.e., Post-Birth Legitimizing, Reinforcing and Capstone) constitute a non-negligible ... See full document
20
Volume 36 - Article 46 | Pages 1399–1434
... the 20-year span nearly all the individuals had moved, and some had made as many as twenty moves, but half of the 10,000 pairs were still situated as close neighbours, living within 500 metres of each other, a ... See full document
38
Volume 36 - Article 56 | Pages 1721–1758
... There are several other limitations to our analysis. There was 27% attrition between the SYPE survey waves, although sampling weights are used in all summary statistics and regression analyses to adjust for ... See full document
40
Volume 36 - Article 51 | Pages 1549–1600
... Figure 9 shows the age-specific fertility rate’s elasticity to unemployment measures (Panel (a)) and economic and financial uncertainty (Panel (b)) (complete results are reported in Table A-2 in the Appendix). The ... See full document
54
Volume 36 - Article 12 | Pages 371–390
... Upon examining Figure 2b, however, we find strikingly different behavior among men. In a nutshell, men, regardless of their age, whether 20 or 50, prefer women around 21 years of age. To many, this may not rise to ... See full document
22
Volume 36 - Article 13 | Pages 391–426
... In this study, we use a nationally representative sample of never-married men and women aged 20–40 in Japan to examine how job and workplace conditions are associated with singles’ intentions about marriage and ... See full document
38
Volume 36 - Article 11 | Pages 339–370
... Gender-role attitudes are measured by the two-pronged question: “What kind of family do you prefer with regard to: 1) housework, and 2) income?” 8 If a male responds that housework should mainly be the wife’s ... See full document
34
Volume 36 - Article 27 | Pages 759–802
... the 20 th century, Dalla- Zuanna (2010) came across a case of delayed baptism, discussed by the priests in the course of one of their regular ...the 20 th century in Padua, for the church authorities, ... See full document
46
Volume 36 - Article 28 | Pages 803–850
... In summary, the own-children rates appear to be the most trustworthy, cover the widest age range, and are available in the largest set of surveys and countries. Date-of- last-birth rates are strongly correlated with ... See full document
50
Volume 36 - Article 36 | Pages 1039–1080
... In the beginning of the 19 th century, diseases affected by nutritional status became an increasingly important determinant of mortality in Sweden. This trend was a consequence of the mortality decline in which a ... See full document
44
Volume 21 - Article 20 | Pages 599–626
... Thus far, demographic research in Poland has corroborated findings from the rest of Eastern Europe that fertility barriers include the rising cost of having children and the inability [r] ... See full document
30
Volume 20 - Article 4 | Pages 11–36
... Women’s employment increases their independence and, as a result, the risk of marital disruption, whether by overthrowing traditional marriage norms, by facilitating divorce[r] ... See full document
28
Volume 30 - Article 21 | Pages 609–640
... (28.7 per 1,000 in 1971), and was thereafter consistently in the high 20s or low 30s. Interpreting these data is hampered by not knowing how many notified abortions in 1970 would have been clandestine without the law ... See full document
34
Volume 34 - Article 36 | Pages 1037–1052
... Tempo distortions in childbearing associated with the migration event for some migrant groups should make for more cautious use of period TFRs as a summary measure of the likely completed family size of migrants. When ... See full document
18
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 44 | Pages 1337–1360
... under way when the first large-scale official records began in the 1850s (Williams and Galley 1995; Gregory 2008): a much earlier start than in urban areas, where decline generally failed to set in before 1900. British ... See full document
26
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
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