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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 30 - Article 21 | Pages 609–640

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Volume 30 - Article 21 | Pages 609–640

Volume 30 - Article 21 | Pages 609–640

... from 30% to ...2529, 3034, and 3539), at which cohabiting women, who were probably mostly intentionally pregnant, increasingly dominated the diminished corpus of pregnant ... See full document

34

Volume 38 - Article 21 | Pages 513–548 

Volume 38 - Article 21 | Pages 513–548 

... The main questionnaire needed to meet two main aims. First, it had to allow sufficient comparability with the existing UKHLS sample to facilitate incorporation into the main sample and analysis across the whole survey ... See full document

38

Volume 21 - Article 13 | Pages 367–384

Volume 21 - Article 13 | Pages 367–384

... Adult mortality among women of childbearing age more than doubled between 1985-1994 and 1996-1999, and increased by 40 percent between 1996-1999 and 2000- 2005. Close to 60 percent of these extra deaths were to women ... See full document

20

Volume 21 - Article 9 | Pages 235–254

Volume 21 - Article 9 | Pages 235–254

... Migration rates are typically highest for young adults, and drop sharply in middle age. Both the GGB and SEG methodologies use information on deaths by age above some age (or series of ages). One possible approach to ... See full document

22

Volume 21 - Article 30 | Pages 885–914

Volume 21 - Article 30 | Pages 885–914

... of 21%-33% in France, Italy, and Japan, and 34%-62% in Denmark, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and the United States (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development ... See full document

32

Volume 21 - Article 24 | Pages 719–758

Volume 21 - Article 24 | Pages 719–758

... The estimated proportion of each cohort ending in marital disruption, , is presented in Table 3, in columns (3) and (4), and in Figure 4 (baseline estimate). Given that the estimation inevitably contains some error, a ... See full document

42

Volume 19 - Article 21 | Pages 743–794

Volume 19 - Article 21 | Pages 743–794

... Roughly 30% of this group originates from Suriname and the Netherlands Antilles, 15% are of Turkish or Moroccan origin, and the remaining 55% originate from other countries in Africa, Europe, and ... See full document

54

Volume 36 - Article 20 | Pages 609–626

Volume 36 - Article 20 | Pages 609–626

... In Western, Northern, and Southern Europe and in the Anglo-Saxon countries, proportions ever-married at age 30 declined across cohorts. In Central and Eastern Europe the evidence was mixed: there were modest ... See full document

20

Volume 29 - Article 23 | Pages 617–640 

Volume 29 - Article 23 | Pages 617–640 

... Population aging is often perceived as a very widespread phenomenon. According to the last United Nations “Population Aging Report” (2009), the proportion of the global population aged over 60 years was 8% in 1950, 10% ... See full document

26

Volume 13 - Article 25 | Pages 615–640

Volume 13 - Article 25 | Pages 615–640

... The preceding results are abstract ones. Let us be more concrete in comparing the two methods using the same example. We assume the law of mortality defined over five years with survivorship function (100, 60, 30, ... See full document

28

Volume 21 - Article 14 | Pages 385–426

Volume 21 - Article 14 | Pages 385–426

... The daily total numbers of deaths, as well as the number of deaths in selected age groups and social classes, were related to the daily average temperatures using regression models for[r] ... See full document

44

Volume 21 - Article 25 | Pages 759–764

Volume 21 - Article 25 | Pages 759–764

... In the stable population, constant vital rates yield (linear) exponential growth in the number of births, while in the metastable model net maternity that increases exponentially over ag[r] ... See full document

8

Volume 21 - Article 27 | Pages 803–842

Volume 21 - Article 27 | Pages 803–842

... The inclusion of the aggregate proportion of women in the labor market in one of the models provided mixed results, since the effect of the indicator for childcare availability lost it[r] ... See full document

42

Volume 21 - Article 26 | Pages 765–802

Volume 21 - Article 26 | Pages 765–802

... of their partner's wish for a child early in the relationship than young parents, while young couples agreed implicitly more often on having children.. This probably implies that older[r] ... See full document

40

Volume 23 - Article 21 | Pages 587–614

Volume 23 - Article 21 | Pages 587–614

... Data for Italy come from the Indagine Multiscopo sulle famiglie: Famiglia e soggetti sociali (2003) (The Multipurpose Survey on the Family), a representative national survey conducted by the Italian National Statistics ... See full document

30

Volume 21 - Article 7 | Pages 177–214

Volume 21 - Article 7 | Pages 177–214

... In the Cal-QOL sample, heterosexual women in LAT relationships are much less likely to live with a minor child compared to married or cohabiting women, but in the GSS sample there are [r] ... See full document

40

Volume 21 - Article 21 | Pages 627–646

Volume 21 - Article 21 | Pages 627–646

... This second type of within-country inequality is the focus of this article. In the first of three main sections we use DHS data from across SSA in order to highlight the scale of within-country differences in HIV ... See full document

22

Volume 30 - Article 30 | Pages 887–898

Volume 30 - Article 30 | Pages 887–898

... In analogy with the usual way of producing a period-based Total Fertility Rate, we have computed an age-cumulated measure of fertility by duration of stay in Sweden as the sum over al[r] ... See full document

14

Volume 21 - Article 10 | Pages 255–288

Volume 21 - Article 10 | Pages 255–288

... The interviews with national leaders included five main sections: (1) the history of the religious organization in Malawi and an overview of its organizational structure; (2) doctrinal[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 21 - Article 15 | Pages 427–468

Volume 21 - Article 15 | Pages 427–468

... Our analyses indicate that the LNS was able to trace the large majority of sexual relationships reported by survey respondents: for example, when a survey respondent reported that his/he[r] ... See full document

44

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