[PDF] Top 20 Volume 26 - Article 20 | Pages 511–542
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Volume 26 - Article 20 | Pages 511–542
... We begin by briefly describing the predictors of wanting to stop having children; proceed to assess the association between married rural women’s desires to stop childbearing and their[r] ... See full document
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Volume 34 - Article 26 | Pages 741–760
... While complete information is available on all partners and their children prior to union dissolution, there is incomplete information following union dissolution due to the way that non-sample members are tracked ... See full document
22
Volume 29 - Article 20 | Pages 521–542
... The estimates in Panel I show that the fifth-year dissolution probability is .31 for women who entered first marriage before age 20, and declines steadily to .09 for those who did so at age 30–32. The coefficient ... See full document
24
Volume 21 - Article 26 | Pages 765–802
... “I assume that I was born with a desire to have children”, said a woman who had her child at age 20 in reaction to our question on how she thought about having children when she was around 18. In contrast, a man ... See full document
40
Volume 23 - Article 26 | Pages 737–748
... Vaupel, J.W. (1992). Analysis of population changes and differences: Methods for demographers, statisticians, biologists, epidemiologists, and reliability engineers. Paper presented at the PAA Annual Meeting, Denver, ... See full document
14
Volume 22 - Article 26 | Pages 813–862
... to 26% when considering the entire territory of Oesterreich unter der Enns), to only 1%-3% in several of the eastern and southern Austrian Empire Länder (Dalmatien, Militärgränze, Serbische Wojwodschaft und ... See full document
52
Volume 18 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... Our second hypothesis predicted that women who engage in a large share of household labour (>75%) would have lower fertility intentions. In the first model, we see no significant difference between the two groups of ... See full document
28
Volume 19 - Article 26 | Pages 1019–1058
... Almost no impact of individual family policy measures on people’s fertility behavior has ever been observed in Slovenia, except for the short-term one related to a considerable prolongation of parental leave. In 1975, ... See full document
42
Volume 14 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... (2) In Figures 8 and 9, e 30 (t) appears to have a dynamics of its own, as one would expect from an indicator reflecting changes in the epidemiological environment of a population. CAL 30 , in comparison, appears as a ... See full document
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Volume 30 - Article 26 | Pages 753–794
... The analytic samples are based on currently or previously married women who were 60 years or older in 2006, the baseline survey year. For each selected woman, we assemble information on her education, husband‘s ... See full document
44
Volume 31 - Article 18 | Pages 511–552
... Women’s work return after childbirth is closely linked to a nation’s policy regulations. Job-protected maternity/parental leave, the provision of childcare, and the possibility of working flexible hours are the three ... See full document
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Volume 20 - Article 26 | Pages 623–656
... by 20 percent within four years, when consumption expendi- ture per person is used as a measure of household ...from 20 to 65 percent of that obtained when per-capita consumption is used as a measure of ... See full document
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Volume 17 - Article 26 | Pages 775–802
... First, we observe a significant variation in fertility levels across housing types – fertility is highest among couples living in single-family houses and lowest [r] ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... The descriptive statistics of mothers’ fertility intentions by grandparental investment indicate that in all four countries, mothers who said they received grandparental child care hel[r] ... See full document
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Volume 16 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... Although demographic rates are social facts of the most compelling kind, although “culture” and “population” offer contrasting concepts of social structure, and although the theoretica[r] ... See full document
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Volume 31 - Article 26 | Pages 779–812
... [3], we can see that the infants of immigrants from countries with a high SIMR has a significantly higher mortality rate in Norway than infants with a non-immigra[r] ... See full document
36
Volume 39 - Article 26 | Pages 719–752
... Second, although personal attainment is robustly related to mortality in Model 2, adult child attainment in Model 4 and wealth in Model 5 notably attenuate the associations between older[r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26
... Hypothesis 1a : Childless men and women without a partner who are close to the biological age deadline for childbearing are more likely than younger men and women to intend to have child[r] ... See full document
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Volume 41 - Article 26 | Pages 753–780
... Based on existing theory, empirical research, and the specific contexts of rural and urban China, we hypothesized that (1) childless couples have a higher divorce [r] ... See full document
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Volume 40 - Article 26 | Pages 725–760
... Prior research indicates that three dimensions of housing circumstances are thus likely to be particularly important antecedents of partnership dissolution: (1) legal arrangements of hou[r] ... See full document
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