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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 24 - Article 3 | Pages 79–112

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Volume 24 - Article 3 | Pages 79–112

Volume 24 - Article 3 | Pages 79–112

... of reproductive women in 2005 as the origin distribution, with women aged 20–24 in 2005 as the destination distribution, and observed odds ratios of women born in the 1970s as the intergenerational association. ... See full document

36

Volume 39 - Article 24 | Pages 685–700

Volume 39 - Article 24 | Pages 685–700

... Figure 3 gives a synthetic view of the changes that took place in Niger since the late ...Figure 3 are based on unconditional birth intervals and blend the reproductive experience of women reaching distinct ... See full document

18

Volume 22 - Article 24 | Pages 733–770

Volume 22 - Article 24 | Pages 733–770

... The distinct patterns of educational homogamy for rural and urban areas echoed the lasting rural-urban division in education rewards in contemporary China. First, the economic returns on education were higher in urban ... See full document

40

Volume 24 - Article 9 | Pages 217–224

Volume 24 - Article 9 | Pages 217–224

... equality 3 conducted in the International Social Survey Programme (ISSP), the countries involved can be sorted into two main categories: (i) those with strongly or moderately favorable attitudes toward gender ... See full document

10

Volume 24 - Article 23 | Pages 551–578

Volume 24 - Article 23 | Pages 551–578

... The IEHS data indicate that, in 1996, Belarusians had substantially worse health than in 2000 and subsequent years (Table 3). In more recent years individuals have been reporting better health. Since 2000 healthy ... See full document

30

Volume 19 - Article 24 | Pages 907–972

Volume 19 - Article 24 | Pages 907–972

... within 3–5 years of living together, the chances the marriage will be registered at some time in this partnership are minimal: there is virtually no difference between the percentage of registered marriages by the ... See full document

68

Volume 21 - Article 24 | Pages 719–758

Volume 21 - Article 24 | Pages 719–758

... The estimated proportion of each cohort ending in marital disruption, , is presented in Table 3, in columns (3) and (4), and in Figure 4 (baseline estimate). Given that the estimation inevitably contains ... See full document

42

Volume 24 - Article 15 | Pages 345–374

Volume 24 - Article 15 | Pages 345–374

... First, a study of workers on the tea estates provides the opportunity to explore community effects at the local level, where daily social interactions take place. There is emerging work on community effects on health in ... See full document

32

Volume 24 - Article 22 | Pages 527–550

Volume 24 - Article 22 | Pages 527–550

... Similar relations apply to the probabilities of surviving from a given age x to another given age a. The life expectancy is the sum of such survival probabilities, which explains why it must be biased upwards. The ... See full document

26

Volume 24 - Article 14 | Pages 313–344

Volume 24 - Article 14 | Pages 313–344

... First, the occupations mentioned in the Antwerp data have been coded into the HISCO classification, using the guidelines involved in that coding scheme (van Leeuwen, Maas and Miles 2002). Next, standardized recoding ... See full document

34

Volume 33 - Article 4 | Pages 93–112

Volume 33 - Article 4 | Pages 93–112

... Lesthaege and Neels made use of a set of concepts (in Boudon’s sense) that Ansley Coale introduced 40 years ago. Dissatisfied with a pure macro-analytical approach, Coale proposed a simple, general framework within which ... See full document

22

Volume 41 - Article 24 | Pages 679–712 

Volume 41 - Article 24 | Pages 679–712 

... Figure 5 shows the numbers of living kin as a function of the age of Focal. Comparing daughters, granddaughters, and great-granddaughters (Figures 5a, c, and e) shows the in- tegrated effects of mortality and fertility ... See full document

36

Volume 40 - Article 24 | Pages 657–692

Volume 40 - Article 24 | Pages 657–692

... Table 3, the influences of the simple summarising features onto the dependent variables are shown as a summary of 24 models, for which the controlling variables are not ...(Table 3) and then check ... See full document

38

Volume 24 - Article 12 | Pages 257–292

Volume 24 - Article 12 | Pages 257–292

... The finding that advances by Mexican-born immigrants accelerated during the 1990s, though similar to the trend for native-born Hispanics, calls for an explanation. We think this outcome is not implausible for the ... See full document

38

Volume 5 - Article 4 | Pages 79–124

Volume 5 - Article 4 | Pages 79–124

... Bolivia: A number of means for those lost to follow-up differ statistically from those who eventually were re-interviewed: rates of severe stunting, moderate wasting, the fraction reporting that they mainly spoke Quechua ... See full document

48

Volume 35 - Article 24 | Pages 671–710 

Volume 35 - Article 24 | Pages 671–710 

... In order to test Hypotheses 2–4, we applied cluster analysis and identified 10 substantively different types of family trajectories in young adulthood. In line with our second hypothesis, the most dominant trajectory ... See full document

42

Volume 38 - Article 24 | Pages 619–650

Volume 38 - Article 24 | Pages 619–650

... time, 3 = most or all of the time), and the average of the 19 questions was used as a depression symptoms scale at wave 1 (alpha scale reliability coefficient = ...times, 3 = five or more ... See full document

34

Volume 24 - Article 24 | Pages 579–610

Volume 24 - Article 24 | Pages 579–610

... The empirical analyses are based on the German Generations and Gender Survey (GGS) conducted in 2005. The target population is composed of German-speaking respondents of 18 to 79 years who live in private ... See full document

34

Volume 34 - Article 24 | Pages 689–704

Volume 34 - Article 24 | Pages 689–704

... to 24% of their total LCD, decreasing with age, while public transfers ...and 3, boys receive more public and private transfers, and especially more time than girls, similarly to the findings of Donehower ... See full document

18

Volume 24 - Article 25 | Pages 611–632

Volume 24 - Article 25 | Pages 611–632

... Although they do not propose LCLE as an indicator of tempo-adjusted life expectancy, they interpret this correspondence as a piece of evidence, in the linear shift scenario, that curre[r] ... See full document

24

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