[PDF] Top 20 Volume 32 - Article 32 | Pages 873–914
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Volume 32 - Article 32 | Pages 873–914
... The inclusion of the direct effect of age at the time of the DHS interview on each type of cohabitation combined with the indirect effect of this variable controls for two potential li[r] ... See full document
44
Volume 19 - Article 32 | Pages 1217–1248
... Based on these results we imagine those data being: (i) prospective, in particular, following children into orphanhood, perhaps across multiple households or locations (though the ethi[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 32 - Article 5 | Pages 147–182
... Comparing several sources of recently released data – the United States’ 2006‒10 National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG), Spain’s 2006 Fertility, Family, and Value[r] ... See full document
38
Volume 32 - Article 10 | Pages 311–340
... We examine Dutch adults‘ perceptions of how similar or different cohabitation and marriage are, whether they believe that cohabitation would be a strategy to avoi[r] ... See full document
32
Volume 32 - Article 11 | Pages 341–368
... While some studies directly address the issue of changes in union formation in Eastern Europe, including Russia (Perelli-Harris and Gerber 2011; Hoem et al. 2009; Perelli- Har[r] ... See full document
58
Volume 32 - Article 14 | Pages 421–442
... didactic article on the computation of fertility measures from event history models estimated with logistic regression, they steered clear of the difficulty by limiting the space state of conjugal status to ... See full document
24
Volume 32 - Article 15 | Pages 443–486
... the volume and composition of migration flows, but the analysis of the possible impact is beyond the scope of this ...the volume of net migration on the total population and the labor force by comparing ... See full document
46
Volume 32 - Article 17 | Pages 533–542
... Like education, other forms of social status may also interact with gender to influence men’s and women’s relative risk of migration, but we lack studies of how the gender disparity [r] ... See full document
12
Volume 32 - Article 21 | Pages 621–656
... The transition from fall to rise in TFR1 occurred when the increase in the width of the curve more than compensated for any further falls in peak rates; this explanation is valid for [r] ... See full document
38
Volume 32 - Article 7 | Pages 219–250
... Compared to the traditional couple in terms of employment status, cohabiting couples with an inactive female partner and an unemployed male partner are around two[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 32 - Article 6 | Pages 183–218
... Starting with the respondent‘s own education, it is not the difference in educational attainment at the higher levels of education that matters in explaining the differences in the nor[r] ... See full document
38
Volume 32 - Article 13 | Pages 397–420
... I find that both the Family Values and Parental Fertility score variables have a positive and significant impact on the respondent’s fertility: having been raised in a large family in wh[r] ... See full document
26
Volume 32 - Article 12 | Pages 369–396
... We draw on the experiences of three projects conducted in the Agincourt Health and socio-Demographic Surveillance System (AHDSS) site in Mpumalanga Province, South [r] ... See full document
30
Volume 32 - Article 23 | Pages 691–722
... This method enables us to model the variation of the effect of total and age-specific female labor force participation on the respective fertility rates while, at the same time, allow[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 32 - Article 25 | Pages 775–796
... In this study we build upon this research and the literature on autonomy and child health outcomes to examine the association between women’s decision-making autonomy and children’s e[r] ... See full document
24
Volume 21 - Article 32 | Pages 945–975
... This paper examines the relationship between men’s temporary international labour migration from Tajikistan and their spouses’ fertility. There is an established literature examining the links between spatial mobility ... See full document
34
Volume 34 - Article 32 | Pages 899–926
... Thirdly, and as a consequence, the socioeconomic gradient ‒ the shape of the inequalities according to social position ‒ is flatter among individuals with a foreign backgro[r] ... See full document
30
Volume 22 - Article 32 | Pages 1015–1036
... The context of a rapidly ageing society in conjunction with a strong and global downturn boils down to a dilemma in which employers can stick to their passive, 'business as usual' stan[r] ... See full document
24
Volume 23 - Article 32 | Pages 905–932
... an article in The Lancet that called for universal testing in developing countries (Bunnell and Chrutich 2008), James Shelton concludes that the effects of VCT on sexual behavior have been modest (Shelton ... See full document
30
Volume 39 - Article 32 | Pages 883–896
... Model 8, where both measurements of parental fertility behavior and both measurements of social background are included simultaneously, shows that parental fertility behavior and social [r] ... See full document
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