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Joint Effect
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in Educational Reproduction in Germany: A Prospective Study Based on Retrospective Data
> Demography
Published: 17 August 2020
Fig. 5 Joint effect on educational reproduction (high – low) and mobility effect (joint – mobility = fertility effect)
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Journal Article
Demography (2003) 40 (1): 67–81.
Published: 01 February 2003
...Marika Jalovaara Abstract This study investigated the joint effects of spouses’ socioeconomic positions on the risk of divorce in Finland. For couples in which both partners were at the lowest educational level, the risk of divorce was lower than could be expected on the basis of the previously...
Journal Article
Demography (1998) 35 (2): 135–146.
Published: 01 May 1998
... and children and child-support payments. The analysis examines approximately 160 families in which parents divorced between interviews conducted for Wave 1 (1987–1988) and Wave 2 (1992–1994) of the survey. I investigate the effects of joint legal custody holding constant physical custody or placement...
Journal Article
Demography (2022) 59 (4): 1275–1298.
Published: 01 August 2022
... exposure and their neighborhoods' socioeconomic composition over time. With these data, we estimate the joint effects of neighborhood poverty and environmental lead contamination on receptive vocabulary ability. We find that sustained exposure to disadvantaged neighborhoods reduces vocabulary skills during...
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (1985) 22 (1): 1–24.
Published: 01 February 1985
... are used to test a recursive model linking the supply and demand for piped water to selected household and community level variables, and to examine their joint effect on child mortality. The model’s estimated parameters for 1970 and 1976 are used to analyze changes in mortality between the two dates...
Journal Article
Demography (2014) 51 (4): 1423–1449.
Published: 15 July 2014
... be accounted for by the joint effects of female survival advantage and reduced fecundity associated with unstable marriage? Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY79), we find that relationship conflict predicts the sex of children born after conflict was measured; conflict also...
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Journal Article
Demography (2011) 48 (2): 425–436.
Published: 30 April 2011
... health of first-generation, Mexican-origin immigrant women in the United States. The analysis provides evidence that a curvilinear pattern of duration and birth outcomes can be explained by the joint effects of both acculturation and selective return migration in which the former affects health status...
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Demography (1970) 7 (2): 169–173.
Published: 01 May 1970
... the family lives. The other, originally suggested by Bernard Lazerwitz, focuses on the distance to, and the size of, the central city of the nearest standard metropolitan statistical area. Both appear useful, and their joint effects are examined. 26 1 2011 © Population Association of America 1970...
Journal Article
Demography (1976) 13 (2): 273–286.
Published: 01 May 1976
..., if sampling variance is only a small part of the mean-square error, serious mistakes in inference could be made. The Bureau of the Census has developed a model describing the joint effect of sampling and nonsampling errors on census statistics. This article shows how a study of the components of error may...
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in Toxic Neighborhoods: The Effects of Concentrated Poverty and Environmental Lead Contamination on Early Childhood Development
> Demography
Published: 01 August 2022
. ATE = average total effect. AJE = average joint effect. CDE = controlled direct effect. CME = controlled mediator effect.
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Journal Article
Demography (2006) 43 (4): 673–689.
Published: 01 November 2006
... the interracial marriage market has gone unnoticed in prior research because of the failure of prior methods to distinguish joint and marginal effects. 14 1 2011 © Population Association of America 2006 2006 Bayesian Information Criterion Marriage Market Interracial Marriage Conditional...
Journal Article
Demography (1994) 31 (3): 487–507.
Published: 01 August 1994
... Association of America 1994 1994 Marital Status Joint Effect Multiplicative Model Poverty Status Married Individual References Aiken L. S. , & West S. G. ( 1991 ). Multiple Regression: Testing and Interpreting Interactions . Newbury Park, CA : Sage . Antonovsky...
Journal Article
Parental Origins, Mixed Unions, and the Labor Supply of Second-Generation Women in the United States
Demography (2019) 56 (1): 49–73.
Published: 19 November 2018
... (England et al. 2004 ; Read and Cohen 2007 ). Conventional models of women’s labor force participation center on human capital, family context, and labor market characteristics. This study considers cultural influences on women’s economic behavior. We investigate the joint effects of parental origins...
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Journal Article
Demography (1997) 34 (3): 385–398.
Published: 01 August 1997
... that rec- ognizes joint endogeneity and the temporal ordering of variables, by considering a wider range of community influences on fertility behavior, and by employing an econometric procedure allowingfor a multilevel error structure. The results suggest that there are sig- nificant effects on fertility...
Journal Article
Demography (2022) 59 (5): 1981–2002.
Published: 01 October 2022
... such an effect. In joint patrilocal households in rural India, women married to the younger brother are assigned lower social rank than women married to the older brother in the same household. Almost 8% of rural Indian children under 5 years old—more than 6 million children—live in such households. We show...
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Journal Article
Demography (2018) 55 (1): 83–106.
Published: 10 January 2018
... to separation, as expected, but that the likelihood of moving is also relatively high among separated individuals. We find that separation has a long-term effect on individuals’ residential careers. Separated women exhibit high moving risks regardless of whether they moved out of the joint home upon separation...
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Journal Article
Demography (2015) 52 (4): 1243–1268.
Published: 01 July 2015
... a description of labor market and parenting responses to partnership/marriage entry but cannot isolate the causal effect of entry into partnership/marriage. Our most noteworthy finding pertains to parenthood. Following the 2002 adoption law giving partners in an RP the right to joint or stepparent adoption...
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Journal Article
Demography (2024) 61 (3): 769–795.
Published: 01 June 2024
... in multigenerational households with their parents or in-laws experienced significant reductions in empowerment across these three domains. Both having a migrant spouse and living in a multigenerational household had negative effects on beliefs about gender equivalence and reduced joint decision-making for women...
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Journal Article
Demography (2012) 49 (4): 1207–1230.
Published: 26 September 2012
... of the difference in variance between two populations because the S-A-T components and the joint effect for each cause sum to the gross contribution of that cause, and those gross cause-specific contributions in turn sum to 100 % of the difference in the variance of the mortality age distributions (see...
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Journal Article
Demography (2002) 39 (1): 75–93.
Published: 01 February 2002
...Saifuddin Ahmed; W. Henry Mosley Abstract This study examined the relationship between the use of maternal-child health (MCH) care and the use of contraceptives. The high correlation between the two may be due to the independent effect of one on the other or to an association of both with the same...
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