[PDF] Top 20 Volume 34 - Article 25 | Pages 705–740
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Volume 34 - Article 25 | Pages 705–740
... The ZIP models have five 1990 economic indicators: wages, housing rent, college- educated population, employment change, and agricultural employment. We calculated these indicators for the total labor market populations, ... See full document
38
Volume 34 - Article 28 | Pages 797–826
... and 25 for urban men and women, and 25 and 23 for rural men and women), long birth intervals (four years in the cities and three years in the countryside) between the first and subsequent childbirths, and ... See full document
32
Volume 17 - Article 24 | Pages 705–740
... exceeded 25‰ between 2000 and 2004 in almost all of the Northern regions (Trentino- Alto Adige and Liguria excepted) and in ...exceeded 25 in Piemonte, Valle d’Aosta, and ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 22 | Pages 615–656
... As Norway was not a country of choice for migrants until recently (IOM 2015), the positive selection hypothesis may be less pronounced today compared to earlier. We thus expect to observe a convergence in mortality ... See full document
44
Volume 34 - Article 35 | Pages 995–1036
... aged 25–49, report that those with large financial transfers from their parents were much more likely to report very good health than those who had not been given ... See full document
44
Volume 34 - Article 36 | Pages 1037–1052
... 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, but this sudden increase in fertility ... See full document
18
Volume 34 - Article 20 | Pages 563–586
... Female population exposures between 1996 and 2011 – denominators for age and birth-order-specific fertility rates – were computed using official mid-year population estimates by age and sex, provided by the National ... See full document
26
Volume 34 - Article 18 | Pages 499–524
... The unweighted average response rate across the 14 countries included in Table 4 is just below 60%, so four out of ten respondents were not interviewed. To put this response rate into perspective, it can be compared to ... See full document
27
Volume 34 - Article 17 | Pages 467–498
... Small provinces and the provinces that were politically unstable at the time of first interview were not sampled. A total of 7,224 households were surveyed in 1993. In the first wave, the head of household and their ... See full document
34
Volume 27 - Article 24 | Pages 705–718
... Wives’ employment rate increased modestly from around 58% in 1994 to 62% in 2000 and reached a plateau thereafter, but the mean work hours of employed wives declined from 36 hours per week in 1994 to 34 hours in ... See full document
16
Volume 19 - Article 20 | Pages 705–742
... In Lithuania, the migration flows of the population and the ongoing family transformation are important demographic determinants of decreased fertility. Since the middle of the previous decade, matrimonial and ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 19 | Pages 525–562
... The inconsistency score, coded continuously from 0 to 3, measures the number of items (educational attainment, number of children ever born, and number of lifetime sexual partners) for[r] ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 21 | Pages 587–614
... Baizan, Beauchemin, and González-Ferrer (2014) found that Senegalese migrants with partners in the origin country who have the potential to adapt to labor market circumstances in Eur[r] ... See full document
30
Volume 34 - Article 16 | Pages 451–466
... This article provides a structural view of changes in the transition to adulthood in China. Specifically, we trace changes in timing, sequencing, and level of heterogeneity among four synthetic cohorts between ... See full document
18
Volume 34 - Article 23 | Pages 657–688
... Persons who are embedded in this kind of network perceive more social pressure regarding family formation, anticipate strong network support in case of parenthood, and, because of [r] ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 24 | Pages 689–704
... Figure 2 shows life cycle deficit (LCD) by gender, both monetary LCD − difference between consumption and production of market activities − and non-market LCD − based on time use e[r] ... See full document
18
Volume 34 - Article 26 | Pages 741–760
... argument is that individuals with relatively low levels of human capital, women, and especially women with relatively low levels of human capital are likely to have had less influence [r] ... See full document
22
Volume 34 - Article 31 | Pages 885–898
... censuses and an adaptation to the accounting procedures in multiregional life tables are used to estimate Black migrants’ expected duration of residence in the South between 1965 and[r] ... See full document
16
Volume 34 - Article 27 | Pages 761–796
... In many West African countries, births are concentrated at the beginning of the year; therefore, despite using large units of aggregation, we were able to find consistent seasonal birth [r] ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 29 | Pages 827–844
... Due to the increasing proportion of women of reproductive age living in a consensual union and the similarity of childbearing patterns of married and cohabiting women, the proportion o[r] ... See full document
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