[PDF] Top 20 Influencia de los sistemas de información en los resultados organizacionales
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Volume 27 - Article 22 | Pages 645–680
... To summarize, this study has added to the evidence about fertility-depressing effects of a relatively high average education in the census enumeration area where the woman lives (net o[r] ... See full document
11
Volume 31 - Article 27 | Pages 813–860
... strata. 22 Likewise, the lagging use of modern contraceptives among the low-educated in some parts of the region may have contributed to the observed pattern (Macura, Mochizuki-Sternberg, and Garcia ... See full document
16
Volume 19 - Article 27 | Pages 1059–1104
... In Spain, the preference has been for children to be born within marital union. As the 1999 Fertility Survey shows, around 90% of first children were born to married parents, a figure that rises to 96% for second and ... See full document
159
Volume 40 - Article 27 | Pages 761–798
... The combined effects of a greater quantum and a reduced tempo of childbearing following a first birth for adolescent mothers result in a longer and shifted reproductive career. By observing fertility rates following a ... See full document
12
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
111
Volume 21 - Article 22 | Pages 647–680
... A Danish study from 2003 compared pregnant women seeking induced abortion with pregnant women attending antenatal care and found similar associations between previous births and the ch[r] ... See full document
98
Volume 22 - Article 27 | Pages 863–890
... Although cohabitation is becoming increasingly common among young generations in Spain (Domínguez-Folgueras and Castro-Martín 2008) and data from the latest 2001 census confirm that cohabitation is not merely a childless ... See full document
16
Volume 30 - Article 27 | Pages 795–822
... We then discuss our projections for four countries chosen as examples of possible future trends in the gap between female and male life expectancy: continued decline in the gap for a cou[r] ... See full document
21
Volume 31 - Article 2 | Pages 27–70
... We look, in particular, for causes of death associated with four behavioral risk factors: smoking, obesity, alcohol abuse, and illicit drug use.. Obesity is not technically a behaviora[r] ... See full document
22
Volume 32 - Article 27 | Pages 829–842
... Even when we model a 50% increase in current rates of switching, tilting even more in favor of religious disaffiliation, the unaffiliated share of the world’s population would still be[r] ... See full document
123
Volume 14 - Article 2 | Pages 27–46
... What happens if the conditioning on survival to mid-adult ages is dropped and variable increments to life are substituted for the constant increment to life used in the Bongaarts-Feene[r] ... See full document
20
Volume 16 - Article 2 | Pages 27–58
... In the case of a constant annual increase in life expectancy at birth, the prospective median age derived from period life tables always lies above that created using cohort life table[r] ... See full document
74
Volume 18 - Article 2 | Pages 27–58
... In addition to the TFRs, age-and parity-specific fertility rates (ASFRS and PSFRS) are calculated and plotted by calendar year in order to find out whether the change in fertility [r] ... See full document
10
Volume 27 - Article 5 | Pages 121–152
... Our dependent variable is where the focal child lives: with the mother (mother sole custody), with both parents (shared residence), or with the father (father sole custody). The following interview question was used to ... See full document
58
Volume 23 - Article 27 | Pages 749–770
... In the case of St Petersburg, the high prevalence of disability may be attributed to a large cohort of survivors of the 1941-1944 Siege of Leningrad, many of whom legally qualify for spe[r] ... See full document
5
Volume 17 - Article 27 | Pages 803–820
... We thus expect that frequent migrants had higher risks of union disruption in the Soviet period than they had in the transition period and this effect resulted from the differen[r] ... See full document
41
Volume 21 - Article 27 | Pages 803–842
... The inclusion of the aggregate proportion of women in the labor market in one of the models provided mixed results, since the effect of the indicator for childcare availability lost it[r] ... See full document
134
Volume 40 - Article 2 | Pages 27–48
... A large number of studies have also examined how childbearing is related to gender equality within relationships (such as share of household work or preferences toward gender equality) with divergent findings (e.g., ... See full document
7
Volume 41 - Article 27 | Pages 781–814
... This article employs multiple systems estimation to estimate violent mortality, a category that includes both direct killings and forced disappearances, among Salvadorans from 1980 to ... See full document
14
Volume 35 - Article 27 | Pages 783–812
... We take advantage of the concurrent diffusion of unmarried cohabitation and union breakdown among French-speaking Quebeckers to examine whether family background (having grown up with [r] ... See full document
12
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