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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 35 - Article 35 | Pages 1045–1078

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Volume 35 - Article 35 | Pages 1045–1078

Volume 35 - Article 35 | Pages 1045–1078

... (30, 35, and 45), showing the share of delayed marriages that were recuperated by these ...age 35 was 9% among the 1965–1970 cohort, but rose to 14% and 19% for the 1971–1975 and 1976–1980 cohorts ... See full document

36

Volume 35 - Article 38 | Pages 1135–1148 

Volume 35 - Article 38 | Pages 1135–1148 

... Using EU-SILC panel data to investigate full-time employment as a predictor of partnered women’s risk of first birth in Poland, we first multiply imputed employment status two years[r] ... See full document

16

Volume 35 - Article 37 | Pages 1101–1134

Volume 35 - Article 37 | Pages 1101–1134

... How is the diversity of states individuals experience throughout their life course related to sex, ethnic background, educational level, living in an urban or rural context, or growing u[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 35 - Article 36 | Pages 1079–1100

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 35 - Article 18 | Pages 505–534

Volume 35 - Article 18 | Pages 505–534

... Of particular importance for our analysis is the effect of education: Both the woman’s and the partner’s educational attainments had an independent and a positive effect on the probab[r] ... See full document

32

Volume 35 - Article 19 | Pages 535–556

Volume 35 - Article 19 | Pages 535–556

... The gender- and union-specific single-year disability rates were combined with the single-year marital-status life tables derived from the Eurostat data to estimate the person years at[r] ... See full document

24

Volume 35 - Article 16 | Pages 455–470  

Volume 35 - Article 16 | Pages 455–470  

... (While this recent movement in the US in the direction of greater inequality has been referred to as evidence for a stall in gender convergence, we would note that several sources over[r] ... See full document

18

Volume 35 - Article 17 | Pages 471–504 

Volume 35 - Article 17 | Pages 471–504 

... Although cause-specific modal ages at death differ greatly in level, our results indicate that modal age values for leading causes among Canadian males and females increased steadily[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 35 - Article 44 | Pages 1303–1316 

Volume 35 - Article 44 | Pages 1303–1316 

... The main driver of declining youth crime in Denmark is that fewer young people are experiencing contact with the criminal justice (extensive margin), and not lower rates of criminal re[r] ... See full document

16

Volume 35 - Article 42 | Pages 1245–1258

Volume 35 - Article 42 | Pages 1245–1258

... Mexico’s cohabitation boom of the 2000s was driven by cohorts born after 1975, whose cohabiting unions are less likely to transition to marriage than those formed by earlier cohorts.. [r] ... See full document

16

Volume 35 - Article 45 | Pages 1317–1342

Volume 35 - Article 45 | Pages 1317–1342

... Whereas the dissolution risk of directly married couples went down in Europe during the diffusion of premarital cohabitation, the family dissolution risk of children born within marr[r] ... See full document

28

Volume 35 - Article 43 | Pages 1259–1302

Volume 35 - Article 43 | Pages 1259–1302

... We use instrumental variable models with multiple births as instruments to examine the causal effects of family size on the health outcomes of children, as measured by receiving medici[r] ... See full document

46

Volume 38 - Article 35 | Pages 967–1016 

Volume 38 - Article 35 | Pages 967–1016 

... variable. Second, we re-estimate the main models, using the father’s country of birth instead of the mother’s country of birth. Third, we include additional control variables at the individual level (i.e., religious ... See full document

52

Volume 33 - Article 35 | Pages 1015–1034 

Volume 33 - Article 35 | Pages 1015–1034 

... Demographic and Health Survey data from 31 African countries confirm that there are many instances in which women have several years of primary school but cannot read.. In fact, in some[r] ... See full document

22

Volume 35 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30

Volume 35 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30

... The hazard regression models for union formation transitions use age groups as the baseline. Women become at risk of union formation at the age of 15, and age is categorized as under 20, 20‒24, 25‒29, 30‒34, ... See full document

32

Volume 34 - Article 35 | Pages 995–1036

Volume 34 - Article 35 | Pages 995–1036

... After discussing the rationale for including social network indices in the GGS, we provide descriptive information on social network characteristics and an overview of substantive ques[r] ... See full document

44

Volume 35 - Article 3 | Pages 47–80

Volume 35 - Article 3 | Pages 47–80

... Women who marry someone they have known for a short time and whose relationship is not embedded in family ties are more likely to divorce early.. These impulsive marriages reflect cha[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 35 - Article 4 | Pages 81–116

Volume 35 - Article 4 | Pages 81–116

... In our analysis, the result of significant beta convergence without significant sigma convergence indicates that even though overall regional mortality differences have not declined, [r] ... See full document

38

Volume 35 - Article 5 | Pages 117–138

Volume 35 - Article 5 | Pages 117–138

... In this paper we propose the use of the inhomogeneous K -function (Baddeley, Møller, and Waagepetersen 2000) to study spatial attraction in the household locations of some groups of fore[r] ... See full document

24

Volume 35 - Article 6 | Pages 139–166 

Volume 35 - Article 6 | Pages 139–166 

... supplementary materials (Table S.2 and Table S.3). “Age group” measures respondents’ age in five categories: 18–25 (ref.), 26–35, 36–45, 46–55 and 56–65 years. “Relative age” measures the difference between the ... See full document

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