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Colleagues
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Published: 06 January 2020
Fig. 3 Discrete-time event-history models for colleague effects
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Published: 06 January 2020
Fig. 5 Colleague effects by focal person’s and network partner’s gender
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Journal Article
Demography (2020) 57 (1): 243–266.
Published: 06 January 2020
...Fig. 7 Falsification tests for colleague and sibling effects ...
FIGURES
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (1966) 3 (2): 416–422.
Published: 01 June 1966
... to the Current Population Survey (by Beale, Shryock, myself, and various colleagues) demonstrates the utility of this approach. Local studies have made fruitful use of residence histories but typically are unable to delineate birth cohorts or other appropriate base populations exposed to risk. Development...
Journal Article
Demography (2019) 56 (2): 573–594.
Published: 16 January 2019
...Sarah R. Hayford; Victor Agadjanian Abstract A growing body of research has argued that the traditional categories of stopping and spacing are insufficient to understand why individuals want to control fertility. In a series of articles, Timæus, Moultrie, and colleagues defined a third type...
FIGURES
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (2023) 60 (3): 891–913.
Published: 01 June 2023
...Hilde Bras; Adrien Remund; Valérie Delaunay Abstract The lagging fertility transition in West Africa has important repercussions for global population growth but remains poorly understood. Inspired by Caldwell and colleagues' fertility transition framework, as well as by subsequent research, we...
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (1996) 33 (4): 427–428.
Published: 01 November 1996
... on average trends yields a mislead- ingly sanguine view of our recent past and an overoptimistic vision of our proximate future. Averages tell you little when all the movement is toward the extremes. Michael Hout and his colleagues offer the most critical assessment of my address, chastising me for ignoring...
Journal Article
Demography (2018) 55 (2): 743–768.
Published: 05 April 2018
... was that my conclusions were “scientifically highly flawed and morally irresponsible,” a claim that they and their colleagues “hope[d] to make abundantly clear” in their comments here (and via other media; e.g., Hvistendahl 2017 ). I will make it abundantly clear instead that this claim is false...
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Journal Article
Demography (2021) 58 (4): 1575–1602.
Published: 01 August 2021
.... The heritability of completed fertility has been estimated to be between .24 for Swedish women and .43 for Danish women and between .24 for Swedish men and .28 for Danish men ( Kohler et al. 1999 ; Mills and Tropf 2015 ; Tropf, Barban et al. 2015 ). Johnson and colleagues (2004) estimated large heritability...
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (1993) 30 (4): 519–521.
Published: 01 November 1993
... selected colleagues to write on particular topics in order to help establish some of the above-mentioned goals. Response of the membership was prompt and generous. Almost no one declined to referee articles. Articles that were only handwritten outlines at PAA meeting time became submissions out of a sense...
Journal Article
Demography (2014) 51 (4): 1295–1317.
Published: 03 June 2014
... childhood. This is consistent with the influential work of Barker and colleagues, who identified maternal malnutrition (which retards fetal growth and causes permanent organ damage) as the major mechanism linking childhood conditions to adult morbidity (Barker 1992 , 1994 , 2004 ; Barker et al. 1991...
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Journal Article
Demography (2013) 50 (6): 1945–1967.
Published: 26 September 2013
...-classified random-effects models created by Yang and Land ( 2006 , 2008 ). 10 Examples include age-period-cohort characteristic models developed by O’Brien ( 2000 ) and the mechanism-based approach proposed by Winship and Harding ( 2008 ). 9 Although Yang and colleagues correctly pointed...
FIGURES
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (2016) 53 (4): 1245–1252.
Published: 12 May 2016
..., the IE estimates obtained by Masters and colleagues are valid if and only if the underlying data-generating mechanism holds parameters for age, period, and cohort that also have the lowest variance possible. If, however, the parameters do not follow this constraint (see the dashed line in Fig. 1...
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Journal Article
Demography (2013) 50 (6): 1985–1988.
Published: 12 November 2013
... is a novel method. As many scholars have noted (see, e.g., H&R (this issue); O’Brien 2011 ; Powers 2013 ), IE is in fact identical to the principal component estimator (PCE) developed by Kupper et al. ( 1983 ). However, unlike Y&L, Kupper and colleagues clearly noted the potential bias of PCE/IE...
Journal Article
Demography (1987) 24 (4): nil1.
Published: 01 November 1987
... made by the Deputy Editors listed on the masthead. Virtually every submission we have received in the last three and a half years, and the outside reviews obtained for it, has been carefully considered by one-and sometimes two-of these colleagues of mine. The time and the intellectual effort they have...
Journal Article
Jason D. Boardman, Benjamin W. Domingue, Casey L. Blalock, Brett C. Haberstick, Kathleen Mullan Harris ...
Demography (2014) 51 (1): 119–139.
Published: 27 November 2013
... phenotypes comes from a recent report by Rokholm and colleagues ( 2011 ). These researchers used measured height and weight from nearly 4,000 twin pairs from the Swedish Twin Register born between 1951 and 1985. They showed a steady increase in the contribution of genetic factors to variation in BMI for each...
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Journal Article
Demography (2013) 50 (3): 1065.
Published: 25 April 2013
... of a study—for example, the importance of the research question, the nature of the data, the execution of the analytic strategy, the quality of the exposition, or the significance of the findings. The paper by Amuedo-Dorantes and colleagues provides a good example. Throughout the review process...
Journal Article
Demography (2025) 62 (1): 137–158.
Published: 01 February 2025
... ; Krikorian et al. 2020 ). Although many COVID-19 deaths were not preceded by a prolonged caregiving period, the unexpectedness of death and the isolation regulations in hospitals prevented spouses from saying goodbye. Wang, Smith-Greenaway, and colleagues ( 2022 ) found that the surviving spouses of COVID-19...
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (2025) 62 (1): 159–181.
Published: 01 February 2025
... offer a fresh understanding of educational disparities in mothers’ parenting time and insights into the social inequalities in mothers’ work–family balance and their long-term implications for intergenerational (dis)advantage transmission. Kalil and colleagues (2012) characterized...
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Includes: Supplementary data
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