[PDF] Top 20 Realidad de la capacitación en seguridad y vigilancia privada en Colombia
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Volume 39 - Article 15 | Pages 431–458
... With regard to the separate items of joint lifestyles, the differences between union types reveal the same pattern, except for visiting family, in which cohabiters with marriage intentio[r] ... See full document
116
Volume 34 - Article 2 | Pages 39–62
... should retire in a system with a fixed amount of life-time pension obligation. The inter- method variation in these two indicators is especially wide (about four and six years, respectively, for remaining life expectancy ... See full document
327
Volume 39 - Article 42 | Pages 1105–1150
... respondents’ situation at age 10: coresidence with biological parents (with both, with only one, with none); coresidence with at least one grandparent (yes or no); household’s overcrowding rate (number of people living ... See full document
44
Volume 39 - Article 44 | Pages 1181–1226
... Migration has historically been a way of life in West Africa and migration within Ghana is no exception. Ghana’s internal migration is primarily a north–south phenomenon established well before the census started ... See full document
9
Volume 39 - Article 24 | Pages 685–700
... EDSN data follows similar methodological procedures and choices. Women with inconsistent birth histories (i.e., more than 25 years between age 10 and a first birth or birth intervals of less than 8 months or more than 10 ... See full document
7
Volume 34 - Article 39 | Pages 1075–1128
... locates estimates over time. This makes it possible to estimate a trend in child mortality for a period of about 15 years prior to data collection 3 . Since age of mother is used as proxy for the children’s ... See full document
29
Volume 39 - Article 13 | Pages 381–414
... age 15 as the start of the observational period would strongly limit sample selection given that only 55 respondents would have been ...age 15 instead of time of completion of the highest level of education ... See full document
153
Volume 39 - Article 36 | Pages 963–990
... In Figure 3 we present the average number of days (defined as date of exit minus date of entry) spent by migrants in the centre by country of origin, countries being sorted by.. decreasi[r] ... See full document
20
Volume 39 - Article 43 | Pages 1151–1180
... In accordance with the family ties perspective, I propose a research agenda that addresses four issues, each associated with several scientific challenges: (1) identifying the role of fa[r] ... See full document
12
Volume 39 - Article 2 | Pages 33–60
... We analyse (i) the reasons parents provide for their division of parental leave and the link between these reasons and mothers’ and the fathers’ leave length, and (ii) consequences of th[r] ... See full document
48
Volume 39 - Article 1 | Pages 1–32
... As can be seen in Table 4, couples formed by a native man with primary or secondary education and an immigrant woman with higher education than his are systematically less likely to happ[r] ... See full document
121
Volume 39 - Article 37 | Pages 991–1008
... An estimate of the stable growth rate r is needed to apply the formulas in this article. This parameter can be estimated in various ways because all scalable stable population param- eters grow exponentially at ... See full document
7
Volume 39 - Article 14 | Pages 415–430
... This operationalises the concept of declining data quality: respondent or interviewer fatigue can introduce a declining probability of responding positively to the reason for nonuse, whi[r] ... See full document
31
Volume 39 - Article 38 | Pages 1009–1038
... (2011: 284) state, “Little is known about the background and consequences of life course transitions for migrants and their families.” Second, and related to the first point, in contrast[r] ... See full document
144
Volume 39 - Article 4 | Pages 95–135
... Figure 18: Estimated male SMAL from OLS model with proportion of males in service after exiting the parental home as the predictor, England and Wales, 1881.. Source: Schürer and Woolla[r] ... See full document
43
Volume 39 - Article 41 | Pages 1081–1104
... We close our analysis by considering the influence of life-cycle socioeconomic factors, such as educational attainment and relationship stability, on the links between teenage motherhood[r] ... See full document
9
Volume 39 - Article 40 | Pages 1065–1080
... Rates of poverty, as officially defined, are consistently highest among first-generation non-US citizen children, followed by second-generation children with two foreign-born parents (Fi[r] ... See full document
56
Volume 39 - Article 3 | Pages 61–94
... Figure 1b depicts perfect association (or complete agreement) of these two measures: All prospectively unwanted births are also reported retrospectively as unwanted and all prospectively[r] ... See full document
39
Volume 31 - Article 15 | Pages 421–458
... Overall, the opportunities to combine work and family are good in Sweden compared to elsewhere. Parents have statutory rights to parental leave and are generously compensated even in the upper tail of the earnings ... See full document
39
Volume 39 - Article 23 | Pages 671–684
... In a wide range of mortality scenarios, the relationship between change in life expectancy and the logarithm of the proportional change of the mortality allows accurate approxima- tion o[r] ... See full document
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