[PDF] Top 20 Volume 19 - Article 3 | Pages 15–46
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Volume 19 - Article 3 | Pages 15–46
... Delayed entry into parenthood has become a universal feature of European fertility trends (Kohler, Billari and Ortega 2002; Sobotka 2004a; Frejka and Sardon 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007). By the early 2000s, practically ... See full document
34
Volume 32 - Article 46 | Pages 1267–1298
... Table 3 shows that married respondents report better self-rated health, but living alone is not associated with worse subjective health among the unmarried. The coefficient for living alone is negative (i.e., odds ... See full document
34
Volume 14 - Article 2 | Pages 27–46
... The explanation for this discrepancy is evidently the age variation in increments to life shown Figures 3 and 4. The Bongaarts-Feeney mortality tempo adjustment is derived on the assumption that increments to life ... See full document
22
Volume 30 - Article 46 | Pages 1327–1338
... We conduct logistic regressions to assess how much reporting that one had an interest in a relationship with one’s hookup partner prior to the hookup predicts having intercourse on the hookup, with separate models for ... See full document
14
Volume 31 - Article 46 | Pages 1365–1416
... The relative distribution of women by level of education and birth cohort is shown in Table 1 15 . Women with missing data for educational attainment were excluded from the analysis. The analysis includes ... See full document
54
Volume 19 - Article 19 | Pages 665–704
... However, in the 1970s, there was a brief period when public social services for women and families were being developed. This was the period of rising female employment, of the feminist movement, of some local left wing ... See full document
42
Volume 38 - Article 46 | Pages 1389–1422
... In examining whether intergenerational transmission can be found in eastern and western Germany, the results point to a transmission of fertility timing between mothers and daughters primarily in terms of young ... See full document
36
Volume 15 - Article 15 | Pages 435–460
... Turkey has experienced intensive social and economical change since the early 20 th century. The size and structure of its population have changed along with alterations of society. Turkish population trends can be ... See full document
28
Volume 34 - Article 19 | Pages 525–562
... The inconsistency score, coded continuously from 0 to 3, measures the number of items (educational attainment, number of children ever born, and number of lifetime sexual partners) for[r] ... See full document
40
Volume 33 - Article 19 | Pages 535–560
... The original model assumes that the proximate determinants at a point in time affect fertility at the same time. In reality, there is a nine-month delay between a change in a proximate determinant and its impact on ... See full document
28
Volume 37 - Article 19 | Pages 599–634
... Since the onset of the economic crisis there has been a notable decline in immigration flows and in the union formation and fertility of both Spaniards and immigrants (Castro-Martín et al. 2015). Emigration has ... See full document
38
Volume 35 - Article 19 | Pages 535–556
... We applied the decomposition technique proposed by Nusselder and Looman (2004), which helps us to separate the effects of mortality and disability on differences in HLY and ULY. The results are displayed in Table ... See full document
24
Volume 38 - Article 19 | Pages 451–470
... Considering how the results vary between cohorts adds interesting information. Of the four profiles common to both genders, ‘employed single’ was the most common for both women and men, accounting for 33%–35% of the ... See full document
22
Volume 40 - Article 19 | Pages 503–532
... Given the projected substantial increase in the elderly population in the coming decades, aggregate cancer counts in the population might increase despite falling individual risk if the decline in individual risk is ... See full document
32
Volume 39 - Article 19 | Pages 561–592
... The high employment rate among people of childbearing age has not been entirely reflected in the volume of public day care offered to parents with young children (Eydal and Ólafsson 2008). Nevertheless, ... See full document
34
Volume 19 - Article 46 | Pages 1635–1662
... The relevance of this study may seem obscure to demographers accustomed to work- ing only with developed country data (where vital registration systems and population registers have rendered most forms of demographic ... See full document
30
Volume 39 - Article 46 | Pages 1241–1290
... The interaction models with calendar year and employment status by order of conception show the relative risks of conception by employment status and calendar period (Figure 3) and the descriptive statistics of ... See full document
52
Volume 19 - Article 15 | Pages 455–502
... Despite their increased presence in the labour market, mothers continue to reconcile work and family by engaging in part-time work, and often only after children have entered school. Relative to other European countries, ... See full document
50
Volume 15 - Article 19 | Pages 517–536
... aged 15 to 49 who have already given birth to a second child at the time of interview (excluding cases with twins at second birth) and who were at risk of birth (starting eight months after second childbirth) 4 ... See full document
22
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
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