[PDF] Top 20 Aproximación histórica a los abusos sexuales a menores
Has 10000 "Aproximación histórica a los abusos sexuales a menores" found on our website. Below are the top 20 most common "Aproximación histórica a los abusos sexuales a menores".
Volume 12 - Article 4 | Pages 77–104
... As compared to second-generation women, third-generation women in the earlier period had a higher risk of a recent birth and higher cumulative fertility as compared to non-Hispanic whi[r] ... See full document
149
Volume 12 - Article 9 | Pages 197–236
... We had to adjust the model for 64 (i.e. 28%) out of 228 countries or territories of the UN database. The adjusted countries represent 43.2% of the world population en 2000 and China alone 21.0%. The adjustments were ... See full document
10
Volume 41 - Article 12 | Pages 331–366
... This paper shows that under a constant immigration rate of 0.35%, microsimulation models project a declining labour force population for both Austria and Canada between 2011 and 2061. They project that the active ... See full document
9
Volume 23 - Article 4 | Pages 73–104
... Panel 1 shows that while individuals from the higher and middle classes on average attained the highest occupational status at marriage, their prospects in life were the most influence[r] ... See full document
35
Volume 40 - Article 12 | Pages 307–318
... We use the individual-level data sets of three waves of the Hungarian Time Use Survey (HTUS) administered by the Hungarian Central Statistical Office. The waves used in this analysis are from 1986/1987, 1999/2000, and ... See full document
310
Volume 39 - Article 12 | Pages 365–380
... example, for education, comparative cross-sectional analyses show that not holding a high school diploma or having some college compared to holding a high school diploma changes the probability of in-work poverty by ... See full document
54
Volume 37 - Article 12 | Pages 325–362
... and 4–4); eduHH – partners with homogamous high education (pairings 5–5 and 6–6); eduHYPER – hypergamy, the female partner has a lower education level than the male partner (woman’s education given in ISCED ... See full document
83
Volume 15 - Article 12 | Pages 347–400
... mitochondria, and oxidase molecules. They hypothesize that natural selection tends to maximize both metabolic capacity, by maximizing the scaling of exchange surface ar- eas, and internal efficiency, by minimizing the ... See full document
10
Volume 21 - Article 12 | Pages 341–366
... We study the dynamics for large lattices and present our results mostly for city size N = 100. Figures 2-7 are all based on N = 100. In the last section, we discuss the cases N = 50 and N = 200, and show that N greater ... See full document
6
Volume 35 - Article 12 | Pages 315–338
... the status of birth registration was not recorded. Given that these records represent less than 5% (3.2%) of the available data, we do not expect their exclusion to affect the results significantly. None of the excluded ... See full document
70
Volume 12 - Article 7 | Pages 141–172
... What is important is the fact that while the United Nations (1982) seemed to be aware of the existence of other decomposition formulas it failed to realize that all these proce- dures would give the same results if ... See full document
11
Volume 12 - Article 10 | Pages 237–272
... Male and female cancer incidence rates are different. Males have higher incidence rates at older ages than the opposite sex. The stable relationship between the estimations of parameters B and ε D for male and female ... See full document
30
Volume 28 - Article 4 | Pages 77–136
... There are several reasons for revisiting the issue of historical spatial continuity in Belgium. The first one is that we now possess many more SDT indicators than could be used in the 2002 Lesthaeghe and Neels ... See full document
16
Volume 29 - Article 4 | Pages 85–104
... reduces first birth rates at all ages (except for age 40–44). However, the greatest impact is found at younger ages. The first explanation could be that young people can more easily revise their fertility plans. The ... See full document
22
Volume 15 - Article 4 | Pages 61–104
... (ages 12 - 17 ) with cohabiting biological parents show more emotional problems than their counterparts with married biological parents, but their levels of school engagement do not differ ... See full document
26
Volume 12 - Article 8 | Pages 173–196
... Women who in 1957 planned to work indefinitely or in a career were not significantly more likely than other women to choose part-time employment over being out of the labor force in 19[r] ... See full document
36
Volume 19 - Article 12 | Pages 293–360
... Figure 21, plots second and third birth risks standardised to the 1989 level and shows a shift in the expected direction. The overall intensity of childbearing increased during the early 1990s; this increase was more ... See full document
15
Volume 20 - Article 12 | Pages 253–278
... On the other hand, immigrants coming from developed countries are quite different, with high levels of education, significant proportions of people who have come to Spain to retire, an[r] ... See full document
5
Volume 22 - Article 12 | Pages 289–320
... This study analyzed how shocks in cohort-level early life conditions, as represented by deviations from trend in mortality at age 0 (infant mortality) and at ages 1-5 (early childhood [r] ... See full document
167
Volume 24 - Article 12 | Pages 257–292
... The method standardizes for variations in the duration of residence or age composition of immigrant groups, attainments possessed by different groups when first observed after entry, a[r] ... See full document
6
Related subjects