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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 26 - Article 9 | Pages 191–206

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Volume 26 - Article 9 | Pages 191–206

Volume 26 - Article 9 | Pages 191–206

... Assume first that is a constant and is a variable for different populations. It follows from equations (5) and (9) that the model predicts the maximum age of t for all values of . Therefore, populations with ... See full document

18

Volume 14 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26

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 ... See full document

28

Volume 19 - Article 26 | Pages 1019–1058

Volume 19 - Article 26 | Pages 1019–1058

... Although childcare is widely available and affordable (particularly for those with a below-average income), parents are under continuous stress if there is no other person to collect the child in the afternoon. Namely, ... See full document

42

Volume 23 - Article 8 | Pages 191–222

Volume 23 - Article 8 | Pages 191–222

... But just how much difference does the student peak migration schedule make in a projection application? Is the difference significant enough to warrant the use of the student peak model? The answer will, of course, ... See full document

34

Volume 22 - Article 26 | Pages 813–862

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 37 - Article 26 | Pages 853–866

Volume 37 - Article 26 | Pages 853–866

... With women becoming increasingly involved in paid work outside the home, new breadwinning models have emerged. One can distinguish broadly among three main couple-earner models: male-breadwinner, female-breadwinner, and ... See full document

16

Volume 21 - Article 26 | Pages 765–802

Volume 21 - Article 26 | Pages 765–802

... Typically, the older parents in our study met each other at an older age than the young parents, and also had their first child later into the partnership. In the NKPS samples the relationships in which the first child ... See full document

40

Volume 33 - Article 26 | Pages 733–764

Volume 33 - Article 26 | Pages 733–764

... The interpretation of changing educational differentials in fertility over time is made complex by the changing composition of the British population by education. As shown in Figure 1, the proportion of the female ... See full document

34

Volume 32 - Article 26 | Pages 797–828

Volume 32 - Article 26 | Pages 797–828

... We now turn to the question of whether there is evidence of distributional bias for the more substantive variables of interest (fertility intentions, marital happiness, attitudes, housework, and knowing someone who has ... See full document

34

Volume 6 - Article 8 | Pages 191–240

Volume 6 - Article 8 | Pages 191–240

... (Note 9), and it must have had some influence on the generally subordinate position of their employment career, vis-à-vis that of their partners (Note 10) or other household ... See full document

52

Volume 17 - Article 26 | Pages 775–802

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

30

Volume 31 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26 

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

28

Volume 20 - Article 26 | Pages 623–656

Volume 20 - Article 26 | Pages 623–656

... The household head’s characteristics turn out to be an important predictor for new childbearing. As a household head becomes older, a household is more likely to have a newly born child,[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 18 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26

Volume 18 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26

... To facilitate interpretation and comparison between different groups of respondents, all items except for age and hours of household labour have been recoded into ca[r] ... See full document

28

Volume 30 - Article 26 | Pages 753–794

Volume 30 - Article 26 | Pages 753–794

... We also have evidence for educational differentials in adult mortality and maternal educational differentials in child mortality in South Korea (Choe 1987; Kim 1988; Kim 2004). Hen[r] ... See full document

44

Volume 31 - Article 26 | Pages 779–812

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 16 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26

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

28

Volume 40 - Article 1 | Pages 1–26

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

28

Volume 23 - Article 26 | Pages 737–748

Volume 23 - Article 26 | Pages 737–748

... In a heterogeneous cohort, the change with age in the force of mortality or some other kind of hazard or intensity of attrition depends on how the hazard changes with age for the individ[r] ... See full document

14

Volume 41 - Article 26 | Pages 753–780

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

30

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