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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 32 - Article 4 | Pages 107–146

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Volume 32 - Article 4 | Pages 107–146

Volume 32 - Article 4 | Pages 107–146

... Associations between early fatherhood and both allostatic load and health limitation were mediated through smoking, wealth, and physical activity, although significant direct associat[r] ... See full document

42

Volume 37 - Article 32 | Pages 995–1030

Volume 37 - Article 32 | Pages 995–1030

... order 4-and-more ...Section 4, the lack of employment opportunities in the public sector is a potential determinant of the increase in fertility in ... See full document

38

Volume 32 - Article 21 | Pages 621–656 

Volume 32 - Article 21 | Pages 621–656 

... If the increase in TFR1 did not come from an increase in the height of the curve, then it must have come from an increase in the width (Figure 4). We see that this had already been rising across all countries in ... See full document

38

Volume 32 - Article 13 | Pages 397–420 

Volume 32 - Article 13 | Pages 397–420 

... Due to its limitation to France, this study is characterized by several specificities. First, despite its Catholic identity, France is very secularized (Hervieu-Leger 2004) and it was the first European country to become ... See full document

26

Volume 32 - Article 25 | Pages 775–796

Volume 32 - Article 25 | Pages 775–796

... To account for potentially confounding factors in the relationship between women’s autonomy and child’s enrollment, we include a set of other controls in our multivariate analysis. Our model includes the characteristics ... See full document

24

Volume 19 - Article 32 | Pages 1217–1248

Volume 19 - Article 32 | Pages 1217–1248

... Sample sizes somewhat vary across analyses. Spatial analyses use both the complete village samples (N=~3,850 households) from the household roster and data from 582 households in the southern and northern sites in which ... See full document

34

Volume 21 - Article 32 | Pages 945–975

Volume 21 - Article 32 | Pages 945–975

... Much of the literature relating long-term migration to fertility behaviour evaluates the relative importance of socialisation and adaptation in a particular context. From the socialisation perspective, migrant fertility ... See full document

34

Volume 39 - Article 32 | Pages 883–896

Volume 39 - Article 32 | Pages 883–896

... to 4 we include the traditional measures of parental fertility ...than 4% of brothers’ similarity in age at first birth, father’s age at first birth explains just above 17%, and together they explain ... See full document

16

Volume 37 - Article 6 | Pages 129–146 

Volume 37 - Article 6 | Pages 129–146 

... Figure 4 plots trends in TFR* by CPR*. Each country is represented by a line that connects three data points: from the pre-transitional high, to the first survey in the 1990s, to the latest survey. A key finding ... See full document

20

Volume 35 - Article 32 | Pages 961–990

Volume 35 - Article 32 | Pages 961–990

... Among Jews in Israel fertility is very high (TFR of 3.0 in recent years) and nonmarital fertility remains rare (4% of all births to Jewish women in recent years): see ICBS 2014. While it has been suggested that ... See full document

32

Volume 36 - Article 32 | Pages 905–944 

Volume 36 - Article 32 | Pages 905–944 

... The most important basic activities that determine the economic life cycle are working, consuming, sharing, and saving. NTA measures the age profiles of these economic activities: labour income, consumption, public ... See full document

42

Volume 39 - Article 1 | Pages 1–32

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 34 - Article 32 | Pages 899–926

Volume 34 - Article 32 | Pages 899–926

... Since the early work of Breiman and colleagues (Breiman et al. 1984), classification and regression trees (CART) have developed, and a wide range of methods exists today (Ritschard 2013). As mortality is mainly driven by ... See full document

30

Volume 15 - Article 5 | Pages 105–146

Volume 15 - Article 5 | Pages 105–146

... The economic, cultural and psychological factors that underlie the transition to adulthood are, unsurprisingly, interrelated and complex. Several factors have been quoted as being crucial in understanding its ... See full document

44

Volume 8 - Article 5 | Pages 107–150

Volume 8 - Article 5 | Pages 107–150

... To make the country comparison across the various indicators as well as across cohorts easier we proceed from a grouping of countries based on geographical location and social system: Northern Europe (Finland, Norway, ... See full document

46

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 ... See full document

14

Volume 32 - Article 59 | Pages 1603–1630 

Volume 32 - Article 59 | Pages 1603–1630 

... It should also be noted that every census form instructed that one designated person (i.e., the head of the household or, in his or her absence, another “competent adult”) should complete the census form per household, ... See full document

30

Volume 41 - Article 32 | Pages 949–952

Volume 41 - Article 32 | Pages 949–952

... Finally, reaffirming the journal’s Open Science commitments, in place since 2013, we strongly encourage adherence to replicability principles. Henceforward, not only can Replicable status for a paper be earned by ... See full document

6

Volume 32 - Article 12 | Pages 369–396

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 17 | Pages 533–542 

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

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