[PDF] Top 20 Manual de producción sostenible de café en la República Dominicana
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Volume 33 - Article 24 | Pages 665–700
... In order to ensure that the researcher-led referral process would still yield the necessary information for weighting at the analysis stage, an additional PSN question was included to[r] ... See full document
14
Volume 33 - Article 45 | Pages 1257–1270
... Since surveillance efforts began about 25 years ago, about half of all U.S. pregnancies have been unintended. Most developed nations report much lower rates in comparison (Singh, Sedgh, and Hussain 2010). In addition, ... See full document
29
Volume 33 - Article 27 | Pages 765–800
... Haiti, where rates of youth migration are historically high, provides an ideal context for this study. The escalating demand for education, limited availability of education institutions in certain areas, cultural values ... See full document
22
Volume 33 - Article 31 | Pages 909–938
... The three main outcomes of interest explored in these models were (a) a woman saying that she was employed in the last three months (b) minutes spent working in income- generating activities, and (c) minutes spent in ... See full document
42
Volume 39 - Article 24 | Pages 685–700
... With an average of 7.4 children per woman in 2010–2015, Niger is the country with the highest level of fertility in the world (UNPD 2017). The level of fertility remained stable over the last decades. Given the ... See full document
7
Volume 33 - Article 26 | Pages 733–764
... The interpretation of changing educational differentials in fertility over time is made complex by the changing composition of the British population by education. As shown in Figure 1, the proportion of the female ... See full document
16
Volume 24 - Article 33 | Pages 825–830
... The age-specific growth function of an observed population and the reproductive value function based on the population’s current vital rates determine the intrinsic rate of growth implie[r] ... See full document
21
Volume 26 - Article 24 | Pages 661–700
... Although natural resources play a central role in rural livelihoods across the globe, little research has explored the relationship between migration and natural capital use, particula[r] ... See full document
48
Volume 19 - Article 19 | Pages 665–704
... Figures of childbearing intensity have to be read together with the delay in the timing of fertility that we have been observing since the 1955 birth cohort (Figure 7). In the female cohorts born in the late 1960s, the ... See full document
148
Volume 24 - Article 24 | Pages 579–610
... A satisfactory partnership should be favourable for the intention to have a child (Ott 1991; Lillard and Waite 1993; Smolka 2005). Two hypotheses have been developed to better understand the relationship between ... See full document
10
Volume 33 - Article 37 | Pages 1047–1066
... Migrants do not share the same benefits as urban residents, even though they have made a significant contribution to China’s economic development (Smart and Smart 2001; Watson 2009). [r] ... See full document
26
Volume 33 - Article 28 | Pages 801–840
... Fifty years ago, in the first issue of the first volume of the then-new journal Demogra- phy, Nathan Keyfitz described the “population projection as a matrix operator” (Keyfitz 1964). He showed that population ... See full document
24
Volume 33 - Article 29 | Pages 841–870
... Such interpretation is, however, openly questioned by Spoorenberg (2009: 145), who considers the onset of fertility decline in Mongolia as an illustration of the classical demographic t[r] ... See full document
86
Volume 33 - Article 30 | Pages 871–908
... LR test compares the goodness of fit of the current model with interaction effects to the model without interaction effects (but also controlling for all variables); c) interaction effe[r] ... See full document
489
Volume 33 - Article 32 | Pages 939–950
... By describing mobility patterns across dynamic household and neighborhood characteristics, we provide context for future studies that seek to examine the effects of child residential m[r] ... See full document
87
Volume 33 - Article 34 | Pages 985–1014
... The total group of Evangelical women (including women who reported a current religion that differed from the religion in which they were raised) presents much higher odds of being in[r] ... See full document
9
Volume 33 - Article 35 | Pages 1015–1034
... Demographic and Health Survey data from 31 African countries confirm that there are many instances in which women have several years of primary school but cannot read.. In fact, in some[r] ... See full document
60
Volume 33 - Article 36 | Pages 1035–1046
... Thus, family real estate wealth significantly and substantially increased the likelihood of death while the three variables designed to assess the healthy migrant effect (country of bi[r] ... See full document
767
Volume 33 - Article 38 | Pages 1067–1104
... The positive correlation between earnings and fertility estimated in Model 1 could indicate that the income effect dominates the substitution effect – either because individuals with [r] ... See full document
25
Volume 34 - Article 33 | Pages 927–942
... The findings indicated that while better educated women in earlier marriage cohorts (1940s to 1970s) were more likely to divorce, the risk of divorce increased faster and was much high[r] ... See full document
18
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