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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 26 - Article 2 | Pages 41–62

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Volume 26 - Article 2 | Pages 41–62

Volume 26 - Article 2 | Pages 41–62

... In the next interaction model between gender and duration of work contract (M4, Table 2) we investigate the gendered effect of the employment situation of both partners in more detail. The results suggest that ... See full document

24

Volume 23 - Article 2 | Pages 41–62

Volume 23 - Article 2 | Pages 41–62

... Nuances on the rural disadvantage are revealed in an analysis of mortality by branch of service, reported in Table 2. Marines have the highest death rate of all branches; the rate is nearly twice that of the next ... See full document

24

Volume 41 - Article 9 | Pages 231–262

Volume 41 - Article 9 | Pages 231–262

... (Figure 2); 65% of children live in a zun where they have no such kinship tie, but 10% of children live in a zun where this type of tie accounts for 20% of all their kinship ... See full document

34

Volume 41 - Article 38 | Pages 1091–1130 

Volume 41 - Article 38 | Pages 1091–1130 

... At first glance, the boundary of the confidence intervals in Figure 9 is extremely close to the fitted values in the observed period (1960–2016). This is mainly due to the large expected values in the Poisson ... See full document

42

Volume 41 - Article 37 | Pages 1059–1090

Volume 41 - Article 37 | Pages 1059–1090

... Descriptive statistics for the outcome variable are provided in Table 2 and Figure 1. Table 2 reports the mean length of closed birth intervals by parity and birth cohort [r] ... See full document

34

Volume 41 - Article 22 | Pages 617–648

Volume 41 - Article 22 | Pages 617–648

... Migration status: Migration status may influence women’s fertility preferences and behaviors through processes of socialization and adaptation, thus we include indicators for first-generation migrant origin, ... See full document

34

Volume 41 - Article 19 | Pages 545–578

Volume 41 - Article 19 | Pages 545–578

... analysis controlling for sampling weights and variance at the PSU and household level 10 to test the probability of kin marriage according to land and enterprise ownerships of the respondent’s natal household in 2006. ... See full document

36

Volume 41 - Article 20 | Pages 579–592 

Volume 41 - Article 20 | Pages 579–592 

... In all columns, newlywed couples (i.e., at zero years of marriage duration) in capture-based marriages turn out to have a significantly lower profile similarity index than newlywed couples in love marriages, and at least ... See full document

16

Volume 41 - Article 21 | Pages 593–616

Volume 41 - Article 21 | Pages 593–616

... Relatedly, family ties outside the household are increasingly part of the analysis of spatial mobility (Mulder and Cooke 2009). Growing family instability and diversity imply that close family members increasingly live ... See full document

26

Volume 41 - Article 52 | Pages 1453–1478

Volume 41 - Article 52 | Pages 1453–1478

... Part 2 of the Appendix, we plot divorce rates measured with tax data and vital statistics for the province of Quebec and the rest of Canada, and we find that levels and trends across the two data sources are quite ... See full document

28

Volume 37 - Article 41 | Pages 1339–1350 

Volume 37 - Article 41 | Pages 1339–1350 

... Consistently, life expectancy at age 45 for the average Brazilian men born in 1935 (25.9) is lower than the one for BAF officers (30.4). However, at age 75, the difference reduces substantially to only 0.2 years of life, ... See full document

14

Volume 33 - Article 41 | Pages 1153–1164

Volume 33 - Article 41 | Pages 1153–1164

... Although the increase expressed in 2005 prices is substantial, in relative terms, peo- ple of younger and older working ages earned less than they did in 1988. It appears that another age group may have gained more ... See full document

14

Volume 41 - Article 2 | Pages 37–52

Volume 41 - Article 2 | Pages 37–52

... were selected because they have either: (1) been found to be associated with fertility in previous work (marriage, female education); (2) are indicators of poverty and living conditions (type of housing, ... See full document

18

Volume 28 - Article 2 | Pages 33–62

Volume 28 - Article 2 | Pages 33–62

... Figure 2 illustrates, for each zone, numbers of children ever born (CEB) and children dead (CD) by women‘s five-year age cohorts with the exception of the 18-19 age group due to very low numbers across ... See full document

32

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

Volume 36 - Article 62 | Pages 1889–1916 

Volume 36 - Article 62 | Pages 1889–1916 

... First, respondents were asked about the size of their networks, gauged based on questions about the number of family members, friends, and neighbours with whom they were on good terms. We truncated the answers to a ... See full document

30

Volume 34 - Article 2 | Pages 39–62

Volume 34 - Article 2 | Pages 39–62

... Projected age profiles of death rates. Not surprisingly, methods differ substantially in how they project the evolution of age-specific death rates (Figure 1). The Bongaarts’ shifting model, which explicitly assumes age ... See full document

26

Volume 22 - Article 2 | Pages 29–62

Volume 22 - Article 2 | Pages 29–62

... Ethnic disparity in the contextual factors is indicated in Table 2. Contextual variables are constructed as time-varying variables and their value represent changes in these variables over the period of study. ... See full document

36

Volume 37 - Article 62 | Pages 1949–1974

Volume 37 - Article 62 | Pages 1949–1974

... Model 2 replaces the separate measures of child information with the composite measure, this variable clearly becomes the most important predictor for wanting another ... See full document

28

Volume 13 - Article 2 | Pages 35–62

Volume 13 - Article 2 | Pages 35–62

... Table 2 shows the other two aspects of the health distribution: first, the average self-rated health status at the beginning of the observation and, second, the experience of a health deterioration, both by the ... See full document

30

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