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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 30 - Article 2 | Pages 49–70

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Volume 30 - Article 2 | Pages 49–70

Volume 30 - Article 2 | Pages 49–70

... Table 2 provides a similar description for all couples who became parents 1987- 2000. As the period of observation is now shorter, the number of couples observed is smaller. Marital status refers to the situation ... See full document

24

Volume 33 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30

Volume 33 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30

... If the results are mixed concerning parental bereavement and divorce, even less is known about the long-term consequences of temporary separation form parents. This is an important topic, as a large number of children ... See full document

32

Volume 6 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

Volume 6 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

... To simplify the calculations and make them more transparent, assumptions were made with regard to mortality, fertility, migration, and initial population composition. Fifteen year age groups are used throughout. Since ... See full document

20

Volume 20 - Article 30 | Pages 731–816

Volume 20 - Article 30 | Pages 731–816

... However, the heir-based pattern of leaving home changed among the 1960s cohorts. It became much more common for heir sons and heir daughters to leave home at least once in this cohort. The increase in the risks of ... See full document

88

Volume 30 - Article 49 | Pages 1397–1404

Volume 30 - Article 49 | Pages 1397–1404

... When the Gompertz- Makeham model applies (e.g., in cases of adult mortality in most countries), relationship (1) can be used to directly relate differences in the above quantities (and t[r] ... See full document

10

Volume 35 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30

Volume 35 - Article 1 | Pages 1–30

... Model 2, the coefficients for the union-type variable indicate that women who entered into union through direct marriage display the lowest risk of dissolution, compared to marriages with a prior cohabitation ... See full document

32

Volume 34 - Article 30 | Pages 845–884

Volume 34 - Article 30 | Pages 845–884

... approximately 70% of all jobs (Statistics South Africa ...only 30% (Jones and Tarp 2013), but many Mozambican workers seek employment in the South African labour market as the countries have strong economic ... See full document

42

Volume 7 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

Volume 7 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

... 1. Disability pension is provided both as a part of the national pension scheme, which encompass all permanent residents, and as a part of the employment pension scheme, which cover all employees, self-employed and ... See full document

20

Volume 37 - Article 30 | Pages 929–956 

Volume 37 - Article 30 | Pages 929–956 

... Another concern that may have contaminated our estimates was cross-county migration. If the welcome policy in Yicheng attracted more migrants interested in having more children, the estimated effects might have been ... See full document

30

Volume 35 - Article 30 | Pages 891–928 

Volume 35 - Article 30 | Pages 891–928 

... Relatedly, prior to controlling for state fixed effects, the percentage foreign-born was associated with a greater recession-related impact on county unemployment rates. This finding is consistent with those of Kochhar ... See full document

40

Volume 36 - Article 30 | Pages 863–892 

Volume 36 - Article 30 | Pages 863–892 

... At the same time, movements into and out of functional limitation are frequent. For those with limitations over the course of six waves of data collection, most reported these at some points and not others. This suggests ... See full document

32

Volume 40 - Article 30 | Pages 865–896

Volume 40 - Article 30 | Pages 865–896

... Major factors restricting parents’ availability for care emerge from mothers’ and fathers’ paid-work choices. A substantial body of research highlights the impact of mother’s employment on father’s involvement with ... See full document

34

Volume 39 - Article 30 | Pages 855–870

Volume 39 - Article 30 | Pages 855–870

... We extend the current state of European research on serial cohabitation by providing unprecedented estimates on serial cohabitation for women and men from West Germany, born between 1971 and 1973. We examine the ... See full document

18

Volume 41 - Article 30 | Pages 873–912

Volume 41 - Article 30 | Pages 873–912

... Traditional 2 trajectory also increased across birth cohorts, but the 1830‒1839 cohort started to ...and 2 trajectories we discern a so-called ski-jump pattern of increasing fertility preceding fertility ... See full document

42

Volume 22 - Article 30 | Pages 965–984

Volume 22 - Article 30 | Pages 965–984

... Over the period 1998-2003, 29% of the women had one pregnancy, 16% had two pregnancies, and 2% had three pregnancies. Thus, a total of 47% of the subsample of 1,068 women who were married or in stable unions, and ... See full document

22

Volume 31 - Article 2 | Pages 27–70  

Volume 31 - Article 2 | Pages 27–70  

... Figure 2 presents the map of factor scores for male Factor 3. Montana and Wyoming lead the way in injury mortality, with other states in the Mountain time zone also exhibiting high scores. States with large urban ... See full document

46

Volume 29 - Article 2 | Pages 33–70

Volume 29 - Article 2 | Pages 33–70

... In recent years, researchers and policy makers have become increasingly interested in the effects of migration and remittances on the development of communities of origin in developing countries (de Brauw and Rozelle ... See full document

40

Volume 30 - Article 30 | Pages 887–898

Volume 30 - Article 30 | Pages 887–898

... In Figure 1 we have plotted the age-cumulated fertility levels for female European immigrants by single years since immigration, separately for women who were born in a Nordic country, in a non-Nordic country of the ... See full document

14

Volume 38 - Article 49 | Pages 1495–1534

Volume 38 - Article 49 | Pages 1495–1534

... Index 2 (GII) has placed NWE countries among those with the most symmetrical gender conditions, while CEE countries have relatively high levels of inequality in ... See full document

42

Volume 37 - Article 49 | Pages 1611–1624

Volume 37 - Article 49 | Pages 1611–1624

... others? 2) How does having a sibling structure children’s activities? 3) Among those with siblings, how do children’s time and activities with siblings vary by social class and by the gender and age mix of the ... See full document

16

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