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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 33 - Article 6 | Pages 145–178 

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Volume 33 - Article 6 | Pages 145–178 

Volume 33 - Article 6 | Pages 145–178 

... class 6 bars, indicating a high proportion that divorce with some entrance into a new cohabiting union or marriage preceded by ...(class 6) declined slightly, with a slight increase in the class 7 bar, ... See full document

36

Volume 6 - Article 7 | Pages 145–190

Volume 6 - Article 7 | Pages 145–190

... The lifetime probabilities of experiencing a second or third birth differ substantially from that of first births. In both cases, the lifetime birth probability—independent of whether it is calculated from the observed ... See full document

48

Volume 33 - Article 27 | Pages 765–800 

Volume 33 - Article 27 | Pages 765–800 

... Haiti 145 th of 169 countries– the only country in the Americas to fall into the lowest quartile; this rank has remained similarly low (168 th of 187) in more recent years (United Nations Development Programme ... See full document

38

Volume 33 - Article 28 | Pages 801–840 

Volume 33 - Article 28 | Pages 801–840 

... and 6, we know, without the need for any scenario modifications at all, that given changes in the vital rates would have smaller ef- fects on the number of persons with dementia than would changes in the ... See full document

42

Volume 33 - Article 29 | Pages 841–870

Volume 33 - Article 29 | Pages 841–870

... Such interpretation is, however, openly questioned by Spoorenberg (2009: 145), who considers the onset of fertility decline in Mongolia as an illustration of the classical demographic t[r] ... See full document

32

Volume 33 - Article 31 | Pages 909–938

Volume 33 - Article 31 | Pages 909–938

... We also included a set of variables related to the respondent’s view of women’s roles, her contribution to household goods at the time of marriage, and her relationship quality. Marital relationship quality was a score ... See full document

32

Volume 33 - Article 32 | Pages 939–950

Volume 33 - Article 32 | Pages 939–950

... We used all waves of data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort (ECLS-B), which followed a nationally representative cohort of U.S. children born in 2001 at approximately 9 months, 2 years, 4 years, 5 ... See full document

14

Volume 33 - Article 34 | Pages 985–1014

Volume 33 - Article 34 | Pages 985–1014

... Table 3 shows the odds of being in a union for the first time (compared to women who had never experienced a conjugal union) among young women aged 20 to 29 years in Brazil in 2006. In general, Table 3 shows that when ... See full document

32

Volume 33 - Article 38 | Pages 1067–1104

Volume 33 - Article 38 | Pages 1067–1104

... The long-term negative effects of childbearing on wage development is commonly explained by the fact that childbearing hinders new investment in human capital – and/or reduces the value of human capital already ... See full document

40

Volume 33 - Article 39 | Pages 1105–1136

Volume 33 - Article 39 | Pages 1105–1136

... Given that they started school in the south and finished it in the north after their families had migrated, we would attribute the disadvantages faced by members of generation 1.5 to school disruption. The negative ... See full document

34

Volume 33 - Article 40 | Pages 1137–1152

Volume 33 - Article 40 | Pages 1137–1152

... Besides socio-demographic data on each household member and on the household (family structure, economic conditions, geographical area of residence), the survey provided information on the geographical distance and ... See full document

18

Volume 34 - Article 33 | Pages 927–942

Volume 34 - Article 33 | Pages 927–942

... comparable figure is more than 10% using the synthetic cohort estimates. Such a difference is mainly due to the fact that divorce rates rose dramatically after the new millennium in Taiwan. In other words, the various ... See full document

18

Volume 36 - Article 5 | Pages 145–172

Volume 36 - Article 5 | Pages 145–172

... Though a growing number of studies on this topic have looked beyond the Western world, still missing from the literature in an examination of marriage entry among the young population in Korea. Over the past several ... See full document

30

Volume 33 - Article 44 | Pages 1241–1256

Volume 33 - Article 44 | Pages 1241–1256

... We extend previous literature by showing that there are only negligible gender differences in longitudinal family formation trajectories within educational groups in terms of the orde[r] ... See full document

18

Volume 18 - Article 5 | Pages 145–180

Volume 18 - Article 5 | Pages 145–180

... This article discusses how fertility relates to social status with the use of a new dataset, several times larger than the ones used so far. The status-fertility relation is investigated over several centuries, ... See full document

38

Volume 33 - Article 33 | Pages 951–984

Volume 33 - Article 33 | Pages 951–984

... Whilst it cannot be fully tested, given the lack of comparable financial data between the two surveys, this systematic difference in reported transfers would appear to indicate that i[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 14 - Article 9 | Pages 157–178

Volume 14 - Article 9 | Pages 157–178

... This paper develops a joint approach to life and health expectancy based on 2001 UK Census data for limiting long term illness and general health status, and on registered death occurrences in 2001. The model takes ... See full document

24

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 24 - Article 5 | Pages 145–174

Volume 24 - Article 5 | Pages 145–174

... (1995:202) argue that in those countries where divorce is still rare women with high educational levels have a higher risk of marriage dissolution than women with lower education becau[r] ... See full document

32

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

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