[PDF] Top 20 Volume 18 - Article 20 | Pages 569–610
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Volume 18 - Article 20 | Pages 569–610
... Among the childless married or cohabiting female and male respondents who as- sociate the birth of a first child with the expectation of increasing closeness with the part[r] ... See full document
44
Volume 36 - Article 20 | Pages 609–626
... Data is drawn from the Harmonized Histories, marriage, birth, and cohabitation histories for 19 European countries and the United States (Perelli-Harris, Kreyenfeld, and Kubisch 2010). The data was constructed using wave ... See full document
20
Volume 19 - Article 20 | Pages 705–742
... under 18 was 14 per cent lower, and in households with three or more children under 18 this figure was 49 percent lower (UNICEF ...under 18 years of age, and is especially so in households with ... See full document
40
Volume 20 - Article 9 | Pages 169–194
... aged 18 and over, with a sample size of around 1,500 in each ...this article estimates cross-sectional effects on the probability of being childless, contrasting results across three age or cohort groups ... See full document
28
Volume 20 - Article 11 | Pages 209–252
... the 20 th century varied from place to ...of 18 Western countries for three points in time (1951-53, 1973-75, and ...The 18 comparator countries are Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, England and ... See full document
46
Volume 20 - Article 18 | Pages 435–466
... When analysing counts data specific to geographical locations, classical empirical rates or standardised mortality ratios may produce estimates that show a very high level of overdispe[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 20 - Article 23 | Pages 559–594
... This paper has two main goals. The first is to review the context for studying infant mortality, which includes a review of the theoretical framework, the covariates used to examine mortality over the first 60 months of ... See full document
38
Volume 39 - Article 20 | Pages 593–634
... mainly use the 2012 recent wave because the youngest women included in the KLOWF sample (women born in 1982) were 30 years of age in 2012. I use the events of first marriage and first childbirth observed until age 30 ... See full document
44
Volume 20 - Article 27 | Pages 657–692
... In Western Europe, the decline in childlessness in the 1930-1945 cohorts is followed by a fairly pronounced rise, except in France, where it is much smaller and restricted to the 1960s cohorts. France consequently stands ... See full document
38
Volume 24 - Article 24 | Pages 579–610
... The GGS suffers from missing data. In particular the proportion of missing data for income, positive conflict behaviour, and partner’s employment status is considerably high (20%, 15% and 19%, respectively). There ... See full document
34
Volume 18 - Article 18 | Pages 499–530
... WOC respondents, like Edith, often appear to be going along with what the interviewer is saying as a response to a formulation. To say “no” to a formulation, a respondent must do more interactional work, particularly ... See full document
34
Volume 20 - Article 31 | Pages 817–875
... Table 3 reports the responses in terms of number of beans to the questions about going to the market, experiencing a food shortage, having to rely on family members, infant mortality, be[r] ... See full document
60
Volume 20 - Article 30 | Pages 731–816
... Furthermore, I construct a time-varying covariate of schooling to higher education, i.e., four-year university or two-year junior college. In the absence of retrospective educational histories, I manipulate the calendar ... See full document
88
Volume 20 - Article 6 | Pages 65–96
... To evaluate accuracy of individual’s subjective perceptions about HIV infection, we use two measures of risk perception from the MDICP-3: worry of AIDS infection (“How worried are you [r] ... See full document
34
Volume 20 - Article 8 | Pages 129–168
... the national mean. Successive declines in mortality and fertility occurred in Catalonia before most other Spanish regions (i.e. the first DT). In addition, until the 1960s, life expectancy was consistently higher and ... See full document
42
Volume 20 - Article 7 | Pages 97–128
... Contrary to prior assumption, not being involved in economic activity is not conducive to higher chances of fertility, since inactivity in Lomé is not significantly associated with hig[r] ... See full document
34
Volume 33 - Article 21 | Pages 589–610
... In this article, we quantify further the relationship between the variation and the mean of human mortality by testing the application of TL to human death rate[r] ... See full document
24
Volume 20 - Article 26 | Pages 623–656
... This paper presents an empirical analysis of the relationship between fertility and poverty for Indonesia, a country which has experienced unprecedented economic growth and sharp fertility decline over recent decades. We ... See full document
36
Volume 20 - Article 10 | Pages 195–208
... of 20-34 the divorce rate for men in the military is over twice what it is for civilian men, however this gap narrows considerably after age 35 (Adler-Baeder, Pittman, and Taylor ... See full document
16
Volume 41 - Article 20 | Pages 579–592
... Newlywed couples in arranged marriages do not seem to have different profile similarity indexes than those in love marriages, save for when the sample is restricted to only those of Kyrg[r] ... See full document
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