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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 24 - Article 2 | Pages 45–78

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Volume 24 - Article 2 | Pages 45–78

Volume 24 - Article 2 | Pages 45–78

... For PAA presentations, we found related, but somewhat different patterns with regard to the three basic GBD/WHO categories. CMPNC were even more dominant in PAA presentations than in demographic and other social science ... See full document

36

Volume 37 - Article 24 | Pages 743–768

Volume 37 - Article 24 | Pages 743–768

... This paper conducted the following sensitivity checks, and the regression results on informal and formal help remained robust. First, the regressions replaced whether women intended to have a child or not with whether ... See full document

28

Volume 29 - Article 45 | Pages 1261–1298 

Volume 29 - Article 45 | Pages 1261–1298 

... We proxy males’ lifetime income by the amount of pension benefit received. 13 For this, we use information on old age, early retirement, and disability pensions, which are earning-related. We do not use information on ... See full document

40

Volume 5 - Article 3 | Pages 65–78

Volume 5 - Article 3 | Pages 65–78

... Childbearing trends in Sweden have been highly volatile throughout the four last decades of the 20 th century. First-birth fertility of younger women (16-28 years) decreased continuously from the mid-1960s to the ... See full document

16

Volume 34 - Article 24 | Pages 689–704

Volume 34 - Article 24 | Pages 689–704

... Figure 1 shows per capita age profiles of total hours worked − including paid and unpaid activity − by gender. As observed, women spend more hours in market and non- market activities than men throughout the age profile. ... See full document

18

Volume 38 - Article 24 | Pages 619–650

Volume 38 - Article 24 | Pages 619–650

... sometimes, 2 = a lot of the times, 3 = most of the time or all of the time), and we averaged their responses after reverse coding positive items (alpha scale reliability coefficient = ... See full document

34

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 ... See full document

42

Volume 31 - Article 45 | Pages 1337–1364 

Volume 31 - Article 45 | Pages 1337–1364 

... Models 12 and 13 examine how educational homogamy and hypergamy patterns differ by husbands‟ age at first marriage. Building on Model 7, Model 12 adds the interaction terms between the educational homogamy parameter and ... See full document

30

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 1970s. It shows the different ages at which each parity is reached at the beginning and the end of the time period considered in the ... See full document

18

Volume 40 - Article 24 | Pages 657–692

Volume 40 - Article 24 | Pages 657–692

... positive influence (leading to fewer depressive symptoms) of having at least one cohabitational episode. Thus, we can very clearly demonstrate for this dependent variable that the use of sequence analysis considerably ... See full document

38

Volume 41 - Article 24 | Pages 679–712 

Volume 41 - Article 24 | Pages 679–712 

... Kinship and kinship structures appear in diverse applications throughout demog- raphy (and, although it is not the focus here, population biology; see Tanskanen and Danielsbacka 2019). To cite just a few examples, ... See full document

36

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 24 - Article 19 | Pages 455–468

Volume 24 - Article 19 | Pages 455–468

... Fig. 2, using again the Japanese data, we do not observe any particular age or period dependent ...Fig. 2 show the interval of one standard deviation distance from the ... See full document

16

Volume 24 - Article 22 | Pages 527–550

Volume 24 - Article 22 | Pages 527–550

... Our work extends the previous research in several directions. First we confirm some of the findings in the literature in a wider context of mortality schedules and population structures. We conduct simulations based on ... See full document

26

Volume 35 - Article 45 | Pages 1317–1342

Volume 35 - Article 45 | Pages 1317–1342

... Early empirical accounts of the link between the diffusion of cohabitation and the marriage-cohabitation stability gap are based on ad hoc observations of differences between a few specific areas or cohorts. By looking ... See full document

28

Volume 36 - Article 45 | Pages 1361–1398

Volume 36 - Article 45 | Pages 1361–1398

... The same set of control covariates is used to analyse the transition to the first, the second, and the third birth, with the covariates being added step by step in order to analyse how the specific effect of origin is ... See full document

40

Volume 33 - Article 45 | Pages 1257–1270 

Volume 33 - Article 45 | Pages 1257–1270 

... Since surveillance efforts began about 25 years ago, about half of all U.S. pregnancies have been unintended. Most developed nations report much lower rates in comparison (Singh, Sedgh, and Hussain 2010). In addition, ... See full document

16

Volume 19 - Article 45 | Pages 1603–1634

Volume 19 - Article 45 | Pages 1603–1634

... In addition to the household and child variables, each model also includes the respondent’s HIV testing and infection status. This variable is not significantly associated with the school enrollment of 6-10 year old ... See full document

34

Volume 38 - Article 45 | Pages 1359–1388

Volume 38 - Article 45 | Pages 1359–1388

... Despite the policy consensus on its importance, until recently not many studies have focused on adolescent contraceptive use and fewer on unmarried sexually active ado- lescents (Hindin and Kalamar 2017). WHO has ... See full document

32

Volume 41 - Article 45 | Pages 1277–1288 

Volume 41 - Article 45 | Pages 1277–1288 

... Two key variables in the present study were FLFP and TFR, whose data was downloaded from the databases of the OECD website (OECD 2019; OECD.Stat 2019). With respect to FLFP, we consider its value for women aged between ... See full document

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