[PDF] Top 20 Volume 19 - Article 8 | Pages 171–224
Has 10000 "Volume 19 - Article 8 | Pages 171–224" found on our website. Below are the top 20 most common "Volume 19 - Article 8 | Pages 171–224".
Volume 19 - Article 8 | Pages 171–224
... the evidence of the typical changes in fertility, family, and living arrangements, as well as in values and attitudes to children, sexuality, and family life, and subsequen[r] ... See full document
56
Volume 41 - Article 19 | Pages 545–578
... 2016). 8 If greater access to familial resources in the form of matrimonial expenditures confers greater status or power upon wives (see Salem 2018 for evidence that higher matrimonial expenditures by the bride’s ... See full document
36
Volume 19 - Article 23 | Pages 855–906
... Notwithstanding, younger and better-educated women living in (large) urban areas and having a high income are in less agreement with these statements. These women tend to have less traditional attitudes regarding family. ... See full document
54
Volume 19 - Article 19 | Pages 665–704
... Figures of childbearing intensity have to be read together with the delay in the timing of fertility that we have been observing since the 1955 birth cohort (Figure 7). In the female cohorts born in the late 1960s, the ... See full document
42
Volume 19 - Article 25 | Pages 973–1018
... Comparing partially integrated and segregated communities, partially integrated Roma women have a lower total fertility rate; their TFR is at about 3 children per woman, and lower intensity of fertility over the whole ... See full document
48
Volume 19 - Article 26 | Pages 1019–1058
... Although childcare is widely available and affordable (particularly for those with a below-average income), parents are under continuous stress if there is no other person to collect the child in the afternoon. Namely, ... See full document
42
Volume 19 - Article 34 | Pages 1281–1322
... Table 8, putting all of these relative risks together, for those experiencing strong socioeconomic deprivation in childhood compared with those with no indication of childhood socioeconomic deprivation: women who ... See full document
44
Volume 37 - Article 19 | Pages 599–634
... Previous studies on migrant fertility in Spain have shown that these hypotheses are complementary rather than mutually exclusive (Roig and Castro-Martín 2007). The fertility of Latin American migrant women residing in ... See full document
38
Volume 19 - Article 24 | Pages 907–972
... Throughout the 1970s, the level of fertility in Russia remained more or less stable. At the same time, a remarkable process of change in the age pattern of fertility was occurring which, as is well-known, resulted in ... See full document
68
Volume 19 - Article 53 | Pages 1811–1830
... been interviewed in 1998 (MDICP1), in 2001 (MDICP2) and 2004 (MDICP3). 6 In 2004 respondents were counseled and tested for HIV. 7 HIV prevalence in the sample is 9.3 percent for women (95%-CI: 7.6-11.3) and 6.4 percent ... See full document
22
Volume 19 - Article 54 | Pages 1831–1850
... To capture the relationship between son preference, marriage and the value of children, we introduce the notion of perceived present values of married and unmarried sons and daughters (A[r] ... See full document
22
Volume 19 - Article 55 | Pages 1851–1882
... Women who attend religious services weekly are more likely to use modern contraception than those who do not; however, contrary to our expectations, there is no relationship between ex[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 19 - Article 51 | Pages 1759–1780
... Regression-based measures indicate an increase in relative mortality differentials among males at working ages in the 1980s, and a decrease in absolute mortality differentials[r] ... See full document
24
Volume 19 - Article 33 | Pages 1249–1280
... Just like in Morocco, Moroccans living in the Netherlands postpone the first child (Table 3), although it is unlikely that housing problems play a major role. Among first generation Turkish women, who are in a comparable ... See full document
34
Volume 19 - Article 35 | Pages 1323–1350
... This article integrates two methods that analyze the implications of various causes of death for life expectancy. One of the methods attributes changes in life expectancy to various causes of death; the other ... See full document
30
Volume 22 - Article 19 | Pages 549–578
... The hourly wage does not exhibit very large variability across different region of Italy, even if there is a clear tendency of lower hourly wage in the South (linked both with the presen[r] ... See full document
32
Volume 19 - Article 50 | Pages 1749–1758
... Examples of promising research topics in the biodemographic aspects of ecology, evolution and behavior include studies concerned with eco-gerontological rules that describe the relations[r] ... See full document
12
Volume 19 - Article 52 | Pages 1781–1810
... upward flow arrangements were dependent on support from the younger generations; those in balanced arrangements were either engaged in even exchanges between the generations or in s[r] ... See full document
32
Volume 10 - Article 7 | Pages 171–196
... I use the SOCSIM micro simulation program to examine the patterns of descent over periods of several centuries of an initial population using as indicators: the proportion of these peopl[r] ... See full document
28
Volume 23 - Article 19 | Pages 531–548
... The sensitivity of population growth rate to changes in the vital rates can be written in terms of the stable stage or age distribution and the reproductive value distribution.. If the v[r] ... See full document
20
Related subjects