[PDF] Top 20 Volume 40 - Article 15 | Pages 395–416
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Volume 40 - Article 15 | Pages 395–416
... In the second part of the analysis, factors associated with spatial variation in lung cancer mortality are analysed based on consumption data collected in a countrywide survey in 2001–2007 (Target Group Index). A ... See full document
24
Volume 37 - Article 40 | Pages 1327–1338
... Consider now the cumulative effects of the quinquennial fertility changes that have taken place since the onset of fertility transition. Based on Figure 2, we observe only the first 15 years for sub-Saharan ... See full document
14
Volume 40 - Article 54 | Pages 1603–1644
... which 15% of individuals at baseline leave by the end of the observation period, incidence rate ratios for this group would still remain below 1 and statistically ... See full document
44
Volume 40 - Article 47 | Pages 1375–1412
... Finally, the occurrence of specific events during the entire employment trajectory (from age 15 up to age 45) of individuals belonging to the various clusters can be considered. Contrary to the idea of a rigid ... See full document
40
Volume 40 - Article 31 | Pages 897–932
... use 15 waves of the German Socioeconomic Panel and show that unemployment alters the set point of life satisfaction because individuals do not entirely return to their prior levels of subjective ... See full document
38
Volume 40 - Article 28 | Pages 799–834
... In the event-history models, separate regressions are run for male and female research persons as the age at marriage differs considerably between these two groups (see Table 2 below). In the first part of the analysis, ... See full document
38
Volume 40 - Article 9 | Pages 219–260
... In this paper, our primary goal was to solve an age classification problem, i.e., to distinguish between women aged 50 and older and women of reproductive age (15–49 years). This is an important problem in ... See full document
44
Volume 40 - Article 7 | Pages 155–184
... The most important predictors with regard to the research question are those related to household moves, which are coded on a monthly basis. Out of those surveyed, 77% of women moved during the two years before and the ... See full document
32
Volume 36 - Article 1 | Pages 1–40
... aged 15 and older the further variable refers to the occupational group of their husband or father if they resided in the household at the time of the ...age 15 only the family-level information for ... See full document
42
Volume 11 - Article 14 | Pages 395–420
... Over the past 30-40 years, substantial changes in family behavior and organization of the life course have occurred in all industrialized countries. Often characterized as the “second demographic transition,” ... See full document
28
Volume 37 - Article 13 | Pages 363–416
... wages 15 years after the second birth using Swedish register data and instrumenting for birth spacing using ...over 15 years, an increased probability of returning to the labor market between births, ... See full document
56
Volume 35 - Article 40 | Pages 1169–1212
... The transformation of couples and families is one of the greatest social upheavals of recent decades. In France until the mid-1970s, marriage was the only legitimate way of institutionalising the family. But this “social ... See full document
46
Volume 40 - Article 40 | Pages 1153–1166
... To encourage and facilitate the use of this data, we provide a single, standardized, flat data file containing county-to-county one-year migration flows for the period 1990–2010 (contain[r] ... See full document
16
Volume 40 - Article 19 | Pages 503–532
... For that purpose, we introduced a new statistical approach of a secondary population projection to predict cancer incidence and cancer mortality of all tumor sites accounting f[r] ... See full document
32
Volume 40 - Article 49 | Pages 1441–1454
... In 1982 the September local peak visible in all patterns in Figure 4, measured by the ratio of the number of births in September to the average birth rate in August and October, was the [r] ... See full document
16
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 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 30 | Pages 865–896
... To conclude, the overall level of father involvement – whether measured by average minutes of childcare per father, childcare participation rate, minutes of care pr[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 40 - Article 29 | Pages 835–864
... (currently 40) countries with high-quality data produced by a collaboration between the Department of Demography at the University of California, Berkeley, and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research ... See full document
32
Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240
... Given the negative relationship observed between the effort made by countries to provide social transfers for the elderly and the marital fertility index during the periods 1880–1930 and[r] ... See full document
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