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[PDF] Top 20 Volume 40 - Article 3 | Pages 49–60

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Volume 40 - Article 3 | Pages 49–60

Volume 40 - Article 3 | Pages 49–60

... to 49 years increased their unpaid work by an average of 13 minutes per day from 1h 32min in 2009 to 1h 45min in 2014, whereas the levels of their unpaid work had slightly declined between 2003 and ... See full document

14

Volume 10 - Article 2 | Pages 27–60

Volume 10 - Article 2 | Pages 27–60

... than 40 percent experience the event of becoming widowed (it would be more precise to say that 100 women experienced the event of becoming widowed 40 times, because a woman can experience an event more than ... See full document

36

Volume 39 - Article 2 | Pages 33–60 

Volume 39 - Article 2 | Pages 33–60 

... In the next step, we explore whether it is common that fathers who stayed home longer with the child also perform a greater share of the childcare when both parents are back at work. In Table 1, the constant is –0.91 ... See full document

30

Volume 19 - Article 60 | Pages 2011–2042

Volume 19 - Article 60 | Pages 2011–2042

... For substantive and methodological reasons, we focus our analyses on educational differ- entials in mortality at ages 40 to 70. Although the socioeconomic status of a population or of individuals can be assessed ... See full document

34

Volume 30 - Article 60 | Pages 1639–1652

Volume 30 - Article 60 | Pages 1639–1652

... Demographic shifts over the last 40 years, away from marriage, toward increased cohabitation and non-marital childbearing, have resulted in increasingly complex living arrangements. The simultaneous aging of the ... See full document

16

Volume 8 - Article 2 | Pages 31–60

Volume 8 - Article 2 | Pages 31–60

... quadratic nature of this measure itself rather than a reflection of the stabilization process. Another consideration important for practical applications is that the Kullback distance is highly sensitive to the age ... See full document

32

Volume 32 - Article 49 | Pages 1361–1382

Volume 32 - Article 49 | Pages 1361–1382

... A number of covariates were adjusted for that have been considered in previous analyses of the association of loneliness and mortality (Holt-Lunstad et al. 2010; Luo et al. 2012; Steptoe et al. 2013). The ... See full document

24

Volume 34 - Article 40 | Pages 1129–1160 

Volume 34 - Article 40 | Pages 1129–1160 

... born Mexicans are in their thirties, as compared with 16% of Whites and 13% of US- born Mexican Americans. This pattern likely emerges because earlier marriages are more common among Mexican immigrants than among US-born ... See full document

34

Volume 33 - Article 40 | Pages 1137–1152

Volume 33 - Article 40 | Pages 1137–1152

... Besides socio-demographic data on each household member and on the household (family structure, economic conditions, geographical area of residence), the survey provided information on the geographical distance and ... See full document

18

Volume 35 - Article 40 | Pages 1169–1212

Volume 35 - Article 40 | Pages 1169–1212

... These initial findings tend to confirm most of our hypotheses. However, the various characteristics are not independent. Each age corresponds to particular stages in a life cycle. For example, the age-related differences ... See full document

46

Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240

Volume 38 - Article 40 | Pages 1189–1240

... How may the BBM and the subsequent baby bust fit into this general historical account of the marital fertility? In accordance with the econometric models used by Herzer, Strulik, and Vollmer (2012) and Sánchez-Barricarte ... See full document

54

Volume 37 - Article 40 | Pages 1327–1338  

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 Africa. From ... See full document

14

Volume 36 - Article 40 | Pages 1185–1208

Volume 36 - Article 40 | Pages 1185–1208

... education data over time. We chose to show results for the development of educational attainment of the 55- to 59-year-old population, since this is the age group where the greatest change in the labor force ... See full document

26

Volume 40 - Article 49 | Pages 1441–1454 

Volume 40 - Article 49 | Pages 1441–1454 

... Figure 3) one can conclude that if the seasonality of births is determined by biological rhythms, they are strongly disturbed by cultural, social, and economic ... See full document

16

Volume 36 - Article 60 | Pages 1827–1858

Volume 36 - Article 60 | Pages 1827–1858

... Table 3 presents the estimates from the discrete-time hazard models of the transition to a second or a higher order birth for native Belgian and second-generation women of Southern Europ[r] ... See full document

34

Volume 37 - Article 49 | Pages 1611–1624

Volume 37 - Article 49 | Pages 1611–1624

... activities? 3) Among those with siblings, how do children’s time and activities with siblings vary by social class and by the gender and age mix of the siblings? We focus on middle childhood (ages 6–12 years) and ... See full document

16

Volume 7 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

Volume 7 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

... Persons who have died or emigrated abroad during a census period are excluded from the analyses, since we have no information about them at the end of the period. The number of such losses amounted to 2.3 per cent of all ... See full document

20

Volume 6 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

Volume 6 - Article 3 | Pages 49–66

... Fertility assumptions were made with regard to the level, age pattern, and size of the urban/rural differential. With regard to level, a “base” fertility pattern was established that put both urban and rural populations ... See full document

20

Volume 15 - Article 3 | Pages 51–60

Volume 15 - Article 3 | Pages 51–60

... A brief look at what has already happened around the turn of the century confirms this hypothesis. The age gap remained stable at 3.2 years in 1985-1994, in the frame of similar increases in average age at marriage for ... See full document

12

Volume 40 - Article 40 | Pages 1153–1166

Volume 40 - Article 40 | Pages 1153–1166

... To encourage and facilitate the use of this tremendous migration resource, we make two contributions: (1) We publish a single, flat, standardized data file containing all county-to-county one-year migration flows for the ... See full document

16

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