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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 33 - Article 18 | Pages 525–534

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Volume 33 - Article 18 | Pages 525–534

Volume 33 - Article 18 | Pages 525–534

... For this article we focused on the United States and we considered trends in averages. Similar methods, data, and analyses could be used to gain insights on the implications of global demographic trends in a ... See full document

12

Volume 33 - Article 32 | Pages 939–950

Volume 33 - Article 32 | Pages 939–950

... While neighborhood racial composition is a complex issue, many individuals, especially White Americans with children under age 18, choose to live in a neighborhood with more White and fewer Black residents ... See full document

14

Volume 33 - Article 34 | Pages 985–1014

Volume 33 - Article 34 | Pages 985–1014

... An additional significant recent change in the Brazilian religious context is the growth in the number of Evangelicals, who represented only 3.4% of the population in 1950. Sixty years later, 22.2% of Brazilians declared ... See full document

32

Volume 33 - Article 38 | Pages 1067–1104

Volume 33 - Article 38 | Pages 1067–1104

... In the period of study (1995–2010) father’s involvement has increased substantially in Norway. From 1990 to 2010, fathers increased the time spent on household work with 20%, or 35 minutes per day (Kitterød and Rønsen ... See full document

40

Volume 33 - Article 39 | Pages 1105–1136

Volume 33 - Article 39 | Pages 1105–1136

... The data used are from the Italian Longitudinal Household Survey (ILHS), the main Italian social mobility survey. ILHS includes five waves. The first (1997) was a retrospective survey of a representative sample of 4,956 ... See full document

34

Volume 33 - Article 41 | Pages 1153–1164

Volume 33 - Article 41 | Pages 1153–1164

... The results of our descriptive analysis show, for the first time, the development of income, pensions, and private transfers for different age groups, beginning before the dissolution of the GDR to 18 years after ... See full document

14

Volume 33 - Article 42 | Pages 1165–1210

Volume 33 - Article 42 | Pages 1165–1210

... Previous research performed using data from the 1990s or early 2000s showed that single mothers had higher educational levels than mothers in two-parent families in both Spain and Italy (Flaquer, Almeda, and Navarro ... See full document

48

Volume 33 - Article 44 | Pages 1241–1256

Volume 33 - Article 44 | Pages 1241–1256

... We now compare union trajectories distinguishing cohabitation and marriage and bringing in educational groups. The sequences show the orders of three states: single (never or previously partnered), cohabiting, and ... See full document

18

Volume 33 - Article 45 | Pages 1257–1270 

Volume 33 - Article 45 | Pages 1257–1270 

... aged 18–24, poor women, unmarried (and particularly cohabiting) women, and women of color report unintended pregnancy rates several times higher than the national rate (Finer and Zolna ... See full document

16

Volume 33 - Article 29 | Pages 841–870

Volume 33 - Article 29 | Pages 841–870

... The Mongolian socialist experience during the 20 th century can be divided into two phases. The first stage, which lasted till the mid-1940s, was characterized by political and economic hesitation, and experiments with ... See full document

32

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 39 - Article 18 | Pages 525–560

Volume 39 - Article 18 | Pages 525–560

... The risk of death during the first month of life varied according to external temperature’s variation and to socioeconomic status, demonstrating that neonates born to landless rural labo[r] ... See full document

38

Volume 30 - Article 17 | Pages 493–534

Volume 30 - Article 17 | Pages 493–534

... While it is clear that more pronounced socioeconomic differentials in adult mortality did not appear until well after our period ends (Bengtsson and Dribe 2011) it is more[r] ... See full document

44

Volume 33 - Article 30 | Pages 871–908

Volume 33 - Article 30 | Pages 871–908

... LR test compares the goodness of fit of the current model with interaction effects to the model without interaction effects (but also controlling for all variables); c) interaction effe[r] ... See full document

40

Volume 33 - Article 31 | Pages 909–938

Volume 33 - Article 31 | Pages 909–938

... If mothers-in-law experience more years of disability while co-residing with their daughters-in-law, we might see less labor force participation, less time spent working, and les[r] ... See full document

32

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 33 - Article 36 | Pages 1035–1046 

Volume 33 - Article 36 | Pages 1035–1046 

... Thus, family real estate wealth significantly and substantially increased the likelihood of death while the three variables designed to assess the healthy migrant effect (country of bi[r] ... See full document

14

Volume 33 - Article 37 | Pages 1047–1066

Volume 33 - Article 37 | Pages 1047–1066

... Migrants do not share the same benefits as urban residents, even though they have made a significant contribution to China’s economic development (Smart and Smart 2001; Watson 2009). [r] ... See full document

22

Volume 21 - Article 17 | Pages 503–534

Volume 21 - Article 17 | Pages 503–534

... Knowledge of these transition probabilities allows the estimation of a full multistate life table and corresponding period health expectancies (both conditional and unconditional), usi[r] ... See full document

34

Volume 34 - Article 33 | Pages 927–942

Volume 34 - Article 33 | Pages 927–942

... The findings indicated that while better educated women in earlier marriage cohorts (1940s to 1970s) were more likely to divorce, the risk of divorce increased faster and was much high[r] ... See full document

18

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