[PDF] Top 20 Volume 30 - Article 27 | Pages 795–822
Has 10000 "Volume 30 - Article 27 | Pages 795–822 " found on our website. Below are the top 20 most common "Volume 30 - Article 27 | Pages 795–822 ".
Volume 30 - Article 27 | Pages 795–822
... We then discuss our projections for four countries chosen as examples of possible future trends in the gap between female and male life expectancy: continued decline in the gap for a cou[r] ... See full document
30
Volume 27 - Article 5 | Pages 121–152
... least 30% of the time (Bjarnason and Arnarsson 2011), whereas in other surveys, for instance in Norway, shared residence means approximately 50/50 timeshare arrangements (Skjørten, Barlindhaug and Lidén ... See full document
34
Volume 14 - Article 2 | Pages 27–46
... age 30 years, the Swedish increments to life 1980-1995 vary in a range of about ± ...age 30 has the effect of radically reducing the variability of increments to life by ... See full document
22
Volume 39 - Article 28 | Pages 795–834
... ages 30–35 (Figure 8, lower row) have lower intention probabilities to father a child in the near future in 2011 than in 2004 across welfare regimes, and regardless of their perceived income ... See full document
42
Volume 31 - Article 27 | Pages 813–860
... Other covariates in our analysis include age at first birth, nativity, and birth cohort. By including the age at first birth we aim to control for the fact that women with different educational levels tend to start ... See full document
50
Volume 40 - Article 27 | Pages 761–798
... For the women studied, arriving at childbearing age after the baby boom and in a context of changing fertility intentions and a control of fertility having been acquired by advances in contraception, the fall in ... See full document
40
Volume 35 - Article 27 | Pages 783–812
... Union breakdown was still relatively uncommon among the people born between 1931 and 1940: Only 20% of their first union ended in breakdown after 30 years. However, more than half of first unions broke down after ... See full document
32
Volume 32 - Article 27 | Pages 829–842
... The unaffiliated are considerably older, at the global level, than the affiliated, and thus more likely to be past their prime childbearing years. Among all women in 2010 the global median age was 29, the median age for ... See full document
16
Volume 38 - Article 27 | Pages 727–736
... In what follows below, we replicate Finer’s Kaplan–Meier estimates of cohort trends in premarital sex for NSFG women born 1939–1948, 1949–1958, 1959–1968, 1969– 1978, and 1979–1988 at exact ages 15, 18, 20, 25, ... See full document
12
Volume 27 - Article 4 | Pages 85–120
... Data from the 2004 Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe show that 49 percent of Western European grandfathers and 58 percent of grandmothers with grandchildren aged 15 or younger provide some kind of care ... See full document
38
Volume 27 - Article 27 | Pages 775–834
... In summary, while recognizing the limitations of this approach due to the lack a de- tailed quantitative measurement of transfers, our analyses in Figure 6 suggest that net non-financial transfers are relatively ... See full document
62
Volume 19 - Article 22 | Pages 795–854
... (about 30–40%) to parents in the form of increased fee for meals, charges for services beyond the minimum educational program, and contributions to parents’ committee funds (Balcerzak-Paradowska et ... See full document
62
Volume 23 - Article 27 | Pages 749–770
... In practice, a convenient standard population is usually chosen in order to facilitate comparison with other studies. For the purposes of this study, we chose the 2000 mid- year Russian population as the standard. The ... See full document
24
Volume 27 - Article 6 | Pages 153–166
... With respect to premarital conceptions (taken to term), as far back as birth cohorts born in 1925-29 for whites, and 1930-34 for blacks, more educated women had lower probabilities of [r] ... See full document
16
Volume 16 - Article 2 | Pages 27–58
... In the case of a constant annual increase in life expectancy at birth, the prospective median age derived from period life tables always lies above that created using cohort life table[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 31 - Article 2 | Pages 27–70
... We look, in particular, for causes of death associated with four behavioral risk factors: smoking, obesity, alcohol abuse, and illicit drug use.. Obesity is not technically a behaviora[r] ... See full document
46
Volume 17 - Article 27 | Pages 803–820
... We thus expect that frequent migrants had higher risks of union disruption in the Soviet period than they had in the transition period and this effect resulted from the differen[r] ... See full document
20
Volume 40 - Article 2 | Pages 27–48
... A large number of studies have also examined how childbearing is related to gender equality within relationships (such as share of household work or preferences toward gender equality) with divergent findings (e.g., ... See full document
24
Volume 18 - Article 2 | Pages 27–58
... In addition to the TFRs, age-and parity-specific fertility rates (ASFRS and PSFRS) are calculated and plotted by calendar year in order to find out whether the change in fertility [r] ... See full document
34
Volume 19 - Article 27 | Pages 1059–1104
... The slight upturn in fertility rates since 1999 is due, in strictly demographic terms, to two effects: the small increase in the first-order rate among Spanish women and the contribution of foreign women. The ... See full document
48
Related subjects