[PDF] Top 20 Cine italiano: ayer, hoy (¿y mañana?)
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Volume 11 - Article 13 | Pages 357–394
... The difference in mortality after birth is considerably larger. In recent years some 20 percent more boys than girls died in the first year of life (Figure 13), although this difference has diminished in the ... See full document
15
Volume 36 - Article 13 | Pages 391–426
... Conditional on wanting to become parents, women working in more sociable environments were only marginally different from others regarding their expected timing of entering parenthood. It is somewhat surprising, however, ... See full document
75
Volume 13 - Article 11 | Pages 231–280
... I show that the alternative measure proposed by Bongaarts and Feeney, called “tempo-adjusted” life expectancy, is exactly equivalent in its generalized form to a measure proposed by bo[r] ... See full document
83
Volume 13 - Article 13 | Pages 301–334
... On 1 January 2000 the Mlomp area included a population of 7,591 residents living in 11 villages. The population density was 108 people per square kilometre. The population belongs to the Diola ethnic group, and ... See full document
8
Volume 33 - Article 13 | Pages 363–390
... In the early 1950s, the eminent French demographer Jean Bourgeois-Pichat created a model of infant mortality that explained why infant mortality decline leads to concentration of infant deaths in the neonatal period ... See full document
132
Volume 15 - Article 13 | Pages 401–412
... In fact, a high quality of the housing stock in combination with difficult access to housing for young people might offer the worst opportunities for having children?. Access to housi[r] ... See full document
6
Volume 13 - Article 19 | Pages 485–520
... Homicide, intentional and unintentional injuries, and HIV/AIDS in the most recent period also accounted for most of the fluctuations in sex differences in all-cause mortality between 1[r] ... See full document
9
Volume 13 - Article 20 | Pages 521–546
... Even if we consider only the last 30 years of this period, when we examine the age- and sex-specific gains to the average life lived, it is evident that there are present demographic pro[r] ... See full document
22
Volume 13 - Article 21 | Pages 547–558
... The finding that these three measures differ substantially from the conventional period life expectancy when mortality changes over time is consistent with theoretical analysis by Bong[r] ... See full document
10
Volume 13 - Article 5 | Pages 117–142
... As derived, ACLE is a weighted average of the life expectancies of the cohorts present in a given period, with each cohort weighted by its probability of survival to that given year.. [r] ... See full document
31
Volume 13 - Article 24 | Pages 597–614
... Finally, let me highlight an implausible implication of the conventional lifetable approach. The implication was discussed in an article on “Repeated Resuscitation: How Lifesaving Alters Life Tables” (Vaupel and ... See full document
20
Volume 13 - Article 4 | Pages 83–116
... In addition to parish register data, this study utilises other available data sets. These include the Population and Housing Censuses of 1991 and 2001, and the Namibia Demographic and Health Surveys (NDHS) of 1992 and ... See full document
16
Volume 23 - Article 13 | Pages 365–398
... this article, with planning status of birth the dependent ...this article examines recent births in the United States and compares the contexts of planned and unplanned ... See full document
14
Volume 13 - Article 22 | Pages 559–572
... Even the striking waves in Swedish period fertility are smoothed out in a plot of the corresponding mean number of children ever born to the birth cohorts of women that contributed to [r] ... See full document
50
Volume 19 - Article 13 | Pages 361–402
... Together with the rise of mean age at first birth we observe also a rise in the interval between the first and second birth, which is significant also for higher and secondary educated[r] ... See full document
18
Volume 22 - Article 13 | Pages 321–346
... Complementing the picture of a halting gender equality process is recent evidence of remarkably large fertility differentials between women who are educated at the same educational lev[r] ... See full document
75
Volume 20 - Article 13 | Pages 279–312
... Data from the 1970 South African Census showed that in rural KwaZulu-Natal, 14% of men and 5% of women aged 50 years and older, were reported to have never been married or were living[r] ... See full document
16
Volume 24 - Article 13 | Pages 293–312
... Prior research also suggests women tend to more accurately report dates of separation and remarriage than men (Martin 2006). Furthermore focusing on women better enables us to compare o[r] ... See full document
12
Volume 21 - Article 13 | Pages 367–384
... In the 1994 survey, children born to mothers who had completed secondary education experienced 39 percent lower mortality, in the 1999 survey they experienced 57 percent lower mortalit[r] ... See full document
9
Volume 41 - Article 13 | Pages 367–392
... In response to a general question on using uncertainty information about future populations in decision-making, respondents wrote, “[It’s] most important that people know [r] ... See full document
14
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