• No results found

[PDF] Top 20 Volume 40 - Article 20 | Pages 533–560

Has 10000 "Volume 40 - Article 20 | Pages 533–560" found on our website. Below are the top 20 most common "Volume 40 - Article 20 | Pages 533–560".

Volume 40 - Article 20 | Pages 533–560

Volume 40 - Article 20 | Pages 533–560

... Most importantly, EU-SILC is the only source that can be used to study individuals’ residential moves in relation to other demographic events in the context of Italy. Therefo[r] ... See full document

30

Volume 40 - Article 28 | Pages 799–834

Volume 40 - Article 28 | Pages 799–834

... Figure 1 depicts Kaplan–Meier curves representing the fraction of unmarried individuals among illegitimate children, orphans who experienced parental death before age 16 (full, maternal, and paternal), and non-orphans. ... See full document

38

Volume 15 - Article 20 | Pages 537–560

Volume 15 - Article 20 | Pages 537–560

... To control for the possibility that educational trends in marital dissolution rates might inappropriately reflect shifts in the proportion of women who complete their education after [r] ... See full document

26

Volume 36 - Article 40 | Pages 1185–1208

Volume 36 - Article 40 | Pages 1185–1208

... Putting our results in perspective, what can be expected for the future? Since younger, higher educated cohorts will continue to replace older cohorts with lower levels of edu- cation, a positive education effect will – ... See full document

26

Volume 37 - Article 40 | Pages 1327–1338  

Volume 37 - Article 40 | Pages 1327–1338  

... 10, 20, 25, and 30 years after the start, and lower variability in sub- Saharan Africa than in Asia and Latin America and the Caribbean at all durations ... See full document

14

Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240

Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240

... In western countries, the demographic transition process that began in the late 19 th century and early 20 th century was interrupted by a period of unexpected growth in fertility in the mid-20 th century. ... See full document

54

Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864

Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864

... External evaluation indicates that age exaggeration tends to bias census counts at older ages upward in Costa Rica. One study suggested that the population aged 80 years and older in the 1984 census was overcounted by as ... See full document

32

Volume 40 - Article 30 | Pages 865–896

Volume 40 - Article 30 | Pages 865–896

... regarded as a high-quality source of information on father involvement since it is less affected than other data by recall error or social desirability bias. Many studies have used the UKTUS 2000 data for analyses of ... See full document

34

Volume 40 - Article 47 | Pages 1375–1412

Volume 40 - Article 47 | Pages 1375–1412

... Unfortunately, we cannot directly tackle the issue by controlling for initial health status with our data, because SHR is only recorded once, i.e., at the time of the IT-SILC interview. However, we indirectly control for ... See full document

40

Volume 40 - Article 49 | Pages 1441–1454 

Volume 40 - Article 49 | Pages 1441–1454 

... PESEL contains only the birth dates of those who were citizens, lived in the new borders of the Polish state as delimited after World War II, and were alive between 1974 and the early 1990s when PESEL was created. To ... See full document

16

Volume 40 - Article 31 | Pages 897–932

Volume 40 - Article 31 | Pages 897–932

... this article we analyze how changes in the experience of job insecurity are associated with subjective parental well-being, using 17 waves of the Swiss Household Panel (SHP) (N = 3,717 men and 3,450 women, ... See full document

38

Volume 40 - Article 6 | Pages 121–154 

Volume 40 - Article 6 | Pages 121–154 

... One recent UK study using repeated cross-sectional analysis found significant race/ethnic inequalities in verbal development in Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Black African, and Black C[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 39 - Article 40 | Pages 1065–1080

Volume 39 - Article 40 | Pages 1065–1080

... Rates of poverty, as officially defined, are consistently highest among first-generation non-US citizen children, followed by second-generation children with two foreign-born parents (Fi[r] ... See full document

18

Volume 40 - Article 48 | Pages 1413–1440

Volume 40 - Article 48 | Pages 1413–1440

... An additional descriptive analysis that included data on only the 207 couples who had given birth to a first and a second child since the collection of the prospective panel data started[r] ... See full document

30

Volume 40 - Article 10 | Pages 261–278

Volume 40 - Article 10 | Pages 261–278

... In our sample, a sibling’s twinning at second birth on average increases their probability of having a third child by about 57% (reflecting that about 43% of parents with two children wo[r] ... See full document

20

Volume 40 - Article 7 | Pages 155–184

Volume 40 - Article 7 | Pages 155–184

... The reasons for moving taken into consideration in this study are (a) moving for homeownership, as buying a home is typically associated with high expenses; (b) moving for marriage, as f[r] ... See full document

32

Volume 40 - Article 8 | Pages 185–218

Volume 40 - Article 8 | Pages 185–218

... The Persistent Joblessness Index (PJI), described in detail in section 3.2, is based on the assumption that the closer two episodes of joblessness or employment discontinuity are, the mo[r] ... See full document

36

Volume 40 - Article 9 | Pages 219–260 

Volume 40 - Article 9 | Pages 219–260 

... Among the 185 women for whom photographs with and without headscarf were available, the MAE was 5.25 years when the model was trained by using photographs with headscarves o[r] ... See full document

44

Volume 40 - Article 33 | Pages 963–974

Volume 40 - Article 33 | Pages 963–974

... I use 2010 decennial census data to measure the extent of residential segregation, as measured by the index of dissimilarity, in metropolitan and micropolitan areas (MSAs) in [r] ... See full document

14

Volume 40 - Article 34 | Pages 975–1014

Volume 40 - Article 34 | Pages 975–1014

... Regarding other factors, we can see that low level of education is positively and high income is negatively associated with the probability of moving back to the parental [r] ... See full document

42

Show all 10000 documents...