• No results found

[PDF] Top 20 Volume 17 - Article 20 | Pages 591–622

Has 10000 "Volume 17 - Article 20 | Pages 591–622" found on our website. Below are the top 20 most common "Volume 17 - Article 20 | Pages 591–622".

Volume 17 - Article 20 | Pages 591–622

Volume 17 - Article 20 | Pages 591–622

... Initial long-distance moves that are followed by additional long- distance moves have about the same ratio of employment to housing related reasons but significantl[r] ... See full document

34

Volume 36 - Article 17 | Pages 525–556

Volume 36 - Article 17 | Pages 525–556

... ages 20 to 30 between the cross-sectional and the longitudinal database is particularly pronounced in Mediterranean countries, where late cohabitation with parents is quite common, while the differences are not ... See full document

34

Volume 17 - Article 24 | Pages 705–740

Volume 17 - Article 24 | Pages 705–740

... We define a ‘migrant’ to be a person who in the year of interest is living presently in a different administrative region (of the 20 administrative regions) than the region of his or her birth, for at least one ... See full document

38

Volume 19 - Article 17 | Pages 557–598

Volume 19 - Article 17 | Pages 557–598

... The data for Germany as a whole in Table 3 show how living arrangements change over a person’s lifetime. To this end, the 2004 Microcensus listed the living arrangement concepts in five age groups between the ages of ... See full document

44

Volume 20 - Article 25 | Pages 599–622

Volume 20 - Article 25 | Pages 599–622

... A variety of parametric models pre- senting the fertility rates as a function of age have been proposed in order to describe the age-specific fertility pattern.. Some of them provide nic[r] ... See full document

26

Volume 17 - Article 15 | Pages 441–464

Volume 17 - Article 15 | Pages 441–464

... Hakim’s (2003) preference theory emphasises, and better specifies the SDT hypothesis of fertility decline. She shows that, if one’s own “pure” preferences drive fertility choices, a relevant proportion (10-20%) of ... See full document

26

Volume 37 - Article 17 | Pages 527–566 

Volume 37 - Article 17 | Pages 527–566 

... Figure A-1 shows the life table deaths for Spanish females, on a log scale, at selected ages (0, 15, 30, 45, 60, 75, 90, and 105) observed and fitted with the LC, LC-coherent, CoDa, and CoDa-coherent models. For most age ... See full document

42

Volume 17 - Article 29 | Pages 859–896

Volume 17 - Article 29 | Pages 859–896

... As pointed out, we do not assume German citizenship and the German residence permit to have a direct impact on the fertility of women in the traditional migrant- worker groups. However, there are other (West) German laws ... See full document

40

Volume 17 - Article 10 | Pages 247–300

Volume 17 - Article 10 | Pages 247–300

... population. 20 But at the same time, the cross-country difference in recent fertility developments basically matches the pattern that, with references to other settings, has been attributed to the inconsistency ... See full document

56

Volume 17 - Article 11 | Pages 301–338

Volume 17 - Article 11 | Pages 301–338

... The usually resident population was estimated for the first time in the 2002 Census and it has been the only one estimation so far. The usual residents of Poland were distinguished by applying the criterion that the ... See full document

40

Volume 20 - Article 20 | Pages 495–502

Volume 20 - Article 20 | Pages 495–502

... and 17 percent of deaths were missing from the SIM, respectively for adult men and women, on average, during the 1990-2000 period (Paes ...the volume of centenarian deaths in our ... See full document

10

Volume 20 - Article 17 | Pages 403–434

Volume 20 - Article 17 | Pages 403–434

... Temporary contracts and high employment turnover, however, have characterised youth labour markets since the mid-1980s (see Figure 3). 5 According to the Labour Force Survey data, during the two decades between 1987 and ... See full document

34

Volume 17 - Article 30 | Pages 897–938

Volume 17 - Article 30 | Pages 897–938

... Our previous study on labor-market attachment and first births (A&S 1) revealed a positive effect of being established in the labor market on the propensity to become a mother [r] ... See full document

44

Volume 17 - Article 9 | Pages 211–246

Volume 17 - Article 9 | Pages 211–246

... example, 17% of the women who were born in 1964 and who were recorded with some college education by the time they were 39, had taken this education after age 30 (see further examples ... See full document

38

Volume 17 - Article 14 | Pages 389–440

Volume 17 - Article 14 | Pages 389–440

... The GGP addresses the individual, partnership, and household levels of analysis through the Generations and Gender Survey (GGS), where individual respondents are in[r] ... See full document

54

Volume 17 - Article 16 | Pages 465–496

Volume 17 - Article 16 | Pages 465–496

... an article which reviewed the historical research to date and combined it with contemporary statistical data, Reher (1998) has reaffirmed the validity of the original macro-regional distinction, and shown that a ... See full document

34

Volume 17 - Article 23 | Pages 679–704

Volume 17 - Article 23 | Pages 679–704

... to their children than do older parents in more sparsely populated regions with high outmigration rates and, similarly, that the higher portion of inmigrated young people i[r] ... See full document

28

Volume 17 - Article 8 | Pages 181–210

Volume 17 - Article 8 | Pages 181–210

... In a study on the effect of educational attainment on first, second and third births in Norway, Kravdal (2001) found significantly higher second and third birth rates for women with the [r] ... See full document

32

Volume 21 - Article 17 | Pages 503–534

Volume 21 - Article 17 | Pages 503–534

... Knowledge of these transition probabilities allows the estimation of a full multistate life table and corresponding period health expectancies (both conditional and unconditional), usi[r] ... See full document

34

Volume 18 - Article 17 | Pages 469–498

Volume 18 - Article 17 | Pages 469–498

... this article suggest that “quality of care” issues are still distant in provider-client interactions, and the needs of clients, particularly regarding access (Speizer, Hotchkiss et ... See full document

32

Show all 10000 documents...