[PDF] Top 20 Volume 33 - Article 2 | Pages 31–64
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Volume 33 - Article 2 | Pages 31–64
... (Table 2) show that about two thirds of Swedish-born women had been married at least once by age ...Table 2 cover all immigrants regardless of age at migration to ... See full document
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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
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Volume 30 - Article 64 | Pages 1733–1768
... We do expect to see that the importance of work experience increased more for men than for women (H2a: gender divergence hypothesis), due to wage dynamics. Although during state socialism high female labour force ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 33 | Pages 927–942
... decades? 2) Do the changes in divorce patterns vary by sex? and 3) What are the implications of these changes in divorce risk on the outcomes of recently formed marriages? ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 48 | Pages 1297–1332
... The most noticeable feature in Belgium is the role of migration-cum- reclassification in overall urban growth. First, as in Sweden, these two components taken together were an essential component of urban growth ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 45 | Pages 1257–1270
... Before proceeding with our decomposition findings, we briefly discuss the population shifts during the period of our study. Table 1 shows large demographic shifts among American women. The female population aged 15–44 ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 42 | Pages 1165–1210
... (NUTS 2), but the Italian regions are grouped into Northwest, Northeast, Center, and South and Islands, because the EU-SILC database only gives information for Italian regions at the NUTS 1 ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 39 | Pages 1105–1136
... The rapid development of northern manufacturing combined with the socio-economic cleavage profoundly affected migration dynamics. Migration from the south to the north characterised Italian society from the early 20th ... See full document
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Volume 20 - Article 5 | Pages 37–64
... To further restrict the search to our risk factors, we were looking for the terms “life style,” “socio-economic status,” “education,” “marital status,” “obesity,” “overweight,” “body mass index,” and “smoking” (including ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 38 | Pages 1067–1104
... Potential confounders are included in the empirical model to net out spurious elements of the association between earnings and first birth probability. Being enrolled in full-time education reduces earned income (as less ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 37 | Pages 1047–1066
... The results of the multinomial logistic regression are shown in Table 2. The dependent variable has four categories, with the most represented category “no participation” as the reference group. Three models are ... See full document
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Volume 33 - Article 36 | Pages 1035–1046
... As expected, the early decades had higher mortality from the selected causes in both age groups. Similar to the population-level data, the model indicates that the largest period effect occurred during the decades ... See full document
14
Volume 33 - Article 35 | Pages 1015–1034
... Figure 2 depicts the strength of the correlation between women’s educational attainment and literacy in each of the 31 countries, illustrating one of the study’s main findings: women’s educational ... See full document
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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
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Volume 29 - Article 2 | Pages 33–70
... In recent years, researchers and policy makers have become increasingly interested in the effects of migration and remittances on the development of communities of origin in developing countries (de Brauw and Rozelle ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 33 | Pages 1007–1042
... The transformations of Taiwan from an agriculture-based to an industrialized economy and further to capital- and skill-intensive industries have formed the backdrop to large-scale social changes. One vivid example is ... See full document
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Volume 21 - Article 2 | Pages 23–64
... 2001). 2 In response to the increased demand for labor in kelp harvesting and processing, the Northern Isles and Orkney as a whole appear to have experienced a near doubling of population within a few decades—a ... See full document
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Volume 5 - Article 2 | Pages 23–64
... The CTFRs in table 2 are not based on any sophisticated models or theoretical arguments. They are educated guesses, based on the fertility experiences of successive cohorts, and graphically inspired recuperation ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 2 | Pages 33–60
... In the next step, we explore whether it is common that fathers who stayed home longer with the child also perform a greater share of the childcare when both parents are back at work. In Table 1, the constant is –0.91 ... See full document
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Volume 28 - Article 2 | Pages 33–62
... Figure 2 illustrates, for each zone, numbers of children ever born (CEB) and children dead (CD) by women‘s five-year age cohorts with the exception of the 18-19 age group due to very low numbers across ... See full document
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