[PDF] Top 20 Volume 31 - Article 20 | Pages 593–624
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Volume 31 - Article 20 | Pages 593–624
... We analyze segregation patterns using two commonly used measures of segregation: dissimilarity and interaction. Dissimilarity is a measure of evenness (the differential distribution of the subject population), and ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 38 | Pages 1167–1198
... From a family perspective, the 19 th and early 20 th centuries witnessed important change. First, the Western European marriage pattern was gradually beginning to disappear, as the number of lifetime singles ... See full document
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Volume 37 - Article 31 | Pages 957–994
... Other definitions of retirement transition were also tested, such as using the first year that old-age pension benefits exceed employment income. Similar definitions have been applied in Swedish register-based studies ... See full document
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Volume 21 - Article 31 | Pages 915–944
... least 20% of its employed population commuted ...the 20-per-cent threshold as this has been used by several studies on internal migration in the Nordic countries (Kupiszewski et ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 48 | Pages 1431–1454
... We therefore perform our statistical analysis on an additional dataset derived from a 10% random sample of the 1984 Costa Rica census data. Census data were collected by the National Institute of Statistics and Censuses ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 37 | Pages 1137–1166
... the 20 th century until 1965, when the century‟s lowest share (11%) was reached (Haslinger ...the 20 th century, the highest percentages were recorded in Carinthia, Styria, and ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 33 | Pages 1007–1042
... Family literature in the West often discusses how marriage decline is accompanied by a surge in the prevalence of co-residential unions (Bumpass, Sweet, and Cherlin 1991; Heard 2011; Kalmijn 2007). While cohabitation is ... See full document
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Volume 20 - Article 31 | Pages 817–875
... Table 3 reports the responses in terms of number of beans to the questions about going to the market, experiencing a food shortage, having to rely on family members, infant mortality, be[r] ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 20 | Pages 593–634
... The upper panels of Figure 3 graph this result. The age-specific transition rate of entry into first marriage as predicted probabilities over age is highest for the ages 27 and 28. The t[r] ... See full document
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Volume 39 - Article 31 | Pages 871–882
... than 20 but reported that they had a bachelor or postgraduate degree (most likely by mistake or out of embarrassment), the resulting sample size was 11,451,478, of which 2,536,585 were immigrant ... See full document
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Volume 41 - Article 31 | Pages 913–948
... between 31 mainland provinces in China from 1985 to 2015, choosing population size, GDP, age structure, real wages at origin and destination, and railway travel time between provincial capitals as explanatory ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 50 | Pages 1477–1502
... Differences between reported social networks and observed social interaction raise questions about how well standard conversational network data capture actual patterns of social [r] ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 49 | Pages 1455–1476
... At the post-primary level, firstborn girls from small families appear to be substantially less likely to be enrolled compared with those hailing from large families; in sharp contrast,[r] ... See full document
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Volume 19 - Article 31 | Pages 1205–1216
... This is due to the fact that, as we have shown in the above, in the case when there is a negative effect of age at first birth on the second birth intensity and the only effect of educat[r] ... See full document
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Volume 23 - Article 31 | Pages 879–904
... However, once observed characteristics of women and unobserved selection effects were properly controlled for, the risks of marital dissolution for those who cohabited prior to marriag[r] ... See full document
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Volume 22 - Article 31 | Pages 985–1014
... Note that for those with children aged 1 to 4, moves very close to parents are less likely than for those without children when compared with making no move at all, but more likely whe[r] ... See full document
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Volume 36 - Article 31 | Pages 893–904
... The country pages always include a table listing all public-use files. These files are available in two different formats: WFS, a plain text ASCII format, and ISSA, a binary format that requires the ISSA ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 31 | Pages 897–932
... this article we analyze how changes in the experience of job insecurity are associated with subjective parental well-being, using 17 waves of the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) (N = 3,717 men and 3,450 women, ... See full document
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Volume 35 - Article 31 | Pages 929–960
... With the majority of the analytic sample transitioning to work alone, work with marriage, or none of the three roles considered (Table 1), we have not jointly analyzed predictors of al[r] ... See full document
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Volume 7 - Article 18 | Pages 593–624
... The situation of illegitimate children and unmarried fathers became a greater concern during the seventies and eighties. It should be mentioned, however, that already before this period, the notion of the legitimate ... See full document
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