[PDF] Top 20 Volume 32 - Article 30 | Pages 835–858
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Volume 32 - Article 30 | Pages 835–858
... To exemplify, if the woman has liberal attitudes towards gender roles (i.e., she has an egalitarian ideology regarding gender roles and gender relations in the couple), and the man doe[r] ... See full document
26
Volume 32 - Article 58 | Pages 1581–1602
... Since this paper was first presented at the IUSSP International Population Conference in Busan in August 2013, the debate in Iran about the draft bill has progressed. The bill is still before the parliament but is now ... See full document
24
Volume 22 - Article 32 | Pages 1015–1036
... This study used three data sources to answer the research questions. First, we carried out a survey among Dutch employers. A random sample of companies in the Netherlands was drawn from the trade register of the Chamber ... See full document
24
Volume 30 - Article 32 | Pages 911–924
... Interestingly, since the 1980s until about 2000 there is a clear upward trend concerning „event-history/biographical analysis‟ in both languages, which may owe to [r] ... See full document
16
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 36 - Article 32 | Pages 905–944
... On average, the main receivers of services produced within the households are clearly young children in the 14 countries. The biggest givers are their mothers, usually women at age 25 to 45. Above this age the surplus ... See full document
42
Volume 32 - Article 25 | Pages 775–796
... The statistical model controls for women’s sociodemographic characteristics and those of their marriages. In examining the effect of women’s decision-making autonomy on enrollment it is important to include in the ... See full document
24
Volume 32 - Article 23 | Pages 691–722
... The described periods are connected to a certain age – a relation, however, that has changed clearly over the last decades. As a result of an interplay between the educational expansion and more accurate and extended ... See full document
34
Volume 32 - Article 59 | Pages 1603–1630
... Using the residual method and repeated censuses, the analysis indicated that the “black” category gained at least 2.2 million newly reclassified members during the 1990s and 3.1 million new members during the first ... See full document
30
Volume 32 - Article 12 | Pages 369–396
... with 30 South African female respondents aged ...another 30 women aged 60-plus (stratified similarly) who were not South African born but had moved to the site from Mozambique in the 1980s–1990s and were ... See full document
30
Volume 27 - Article 28 | Pages 835–852
... aged 30 and above who were childless during the Great Depression might have had to forgo childbearing in some cases, while younger people had the option of postponing their fertility plans until circumstances ... See full document
20
Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864
... Death Distribution Methods are designed to estimate the completeness of death registration relative to population counts. The two most well-established methods are the General Growth Balance method (GGB, Brass 1975; Hill ... See full document
32
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
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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 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 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
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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 39 - Article 1 | Pages 1–32
... As can be seen in Table 4, couples formed by a native man with primary or secondary education and an immigrant woman with higher education than his are systematically less likely to happ[r] ... See full document
34
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
16
Volume 41 - Article 32 | Pages 949–952
... In the light of the recent discussions about the statistical rigour of empirical research, including the interpretation and use of p-values and the importance of the theoretical underpinnings of population studies, the ... See full document
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