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Search Results for Relocation
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Model-based relocation rates of respondents not intending to have a(nother)...
Available to PurchasePublished: 11 July 2017
Fig. 2 Model-based relocation rates of respondents not intending to have a(nother) child, intending to have a(nother) child, and (whose partner is) pregnant by family life stage (log-odds and 95 % confidence interval). Rates calculated from competing risk discrete-time event-history analyses
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Model-based relocation rates of respondents not intending to have a(nother)...
Available to PurchasePublished: 11 July 2017
Fig. 2 Model-based relocation rates of respondents not intending to have a(nother) child, intending to have a(nother) child, and (whose partner is) pregnant by family life stage (log-odds and 95 % confidence interval). Rates calculated from competing risk discrete-time event-history analyses
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Journal Article
Fertility Intentions and Residential Relocations
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Demography (2017) 54 (4): 1305–1330.
Published: 11 July 2017
...Fig. 2 Model-based relocation rates of respondents not intending to have a(nother) child, intending to have a(nother) child, and (whose partner is) pregnant by family life stage (log-odds and 95 % confidence interval). Rates calculated from competing risk discrete-time event-history analyses...
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View articletitled, Fertility Intentions and Residential <span class="search-highlight">Relocations</span>
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Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Rethinking the Two-Body Problem: The Segregation of Women Into Geographically Dispersed Occupations
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Demography (2014) 51 (5): 1619–1639.
Published: 05 September 2014
...Alan Benson Abstract Empirical research on the family cites the tendency for couples to relocate for husbands’ careers as evidence against the gender neutrality of household economic decisions. For these studies, occupational segregation is a concern because occupations are not random by sex...
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Journal Article
Demography (2021) 58 (2): 451–470.
Published: 01 April 2021
...Liana Christin Landivar; Leah Ruppanner; William J. Scarborough Abstract Married mothers who relocate are less likely to be employed after an interstate move than married childless women and nonmobile mothers. Here, we ask whether moving to a state with more expensive childcare is associated...
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View articletitled, Are States Created Equal? Moving to a State With More Expensive Childcare Reduces Mothers' Odds of Employment
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for article titled, Are States Created Equal? Moving to a State With More Expensive Childcare Reduces Mothers' Odds of Employment
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Changing families and changing mobility: Their impact on the central city
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Demography (1982) 19 (3): 261–277.
Published: 01 August 1982
... gains in the numbers of small, nontraditional households have occurred since the 1950s, it has not been demonstrated that: (a) these households are more likely to relocate in the city than traditional family households (husband-wife with children under 18); or (b) their cityward relocation patterns...
Journal Article
Divorced Fathers’ Proximity and Children’s Long-Run Outcomes: Evidence From Norwegian Registry Data
Available to Purchase
Demography (2011) 48 (3): 1005–1027.
Published: 21 June 2011
..., the father’s relocation to a more distant location following the divorce may shelter the child from disruptions in the structure of the child’s life as they split time between households and/or from post-divorce interparental conflict. 6 6 2011 21 6 2011 © Population Association of America...
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Journal Article
Forced Displacement From Rental Housing: Prevalence and Neighborhood Consequences
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Demography (2015) 52 (5): 1751–1772.
Published: 19 August 2015
... or other kind of forced move in the previous two years. Multivariate analyses suggest that renters who experienced a forced move relocate to poorer and higher-crime neighborhoods than those who move under less-demanding circumstances. By providing evidence implying that involuntary displacement...
Journal Article
The Location of Displaced New Orleans Residents in the Year After Hurricane Katrina
Available to Purchase
Demography (2014) 51 (3): 753–775.
Published: 06 March 2014
... from New Orleans and that adults born outside Louisiana were substantially more likely to have relocated away from the state. Model 4, which adds all remaining covariates to the previous model, yielded the same pattern of results for the effects of race and education on the post–Hurricane Katrina...
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View articletitled, The Location of Displaced New Orleans Residents in the Year After Hurricane Katrina
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for article titled, The Location of Displaced New Orleans Residents in the Year After Hurricane Katrina
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Childhood Risk of Parental Absence in Tanzania
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Demography (2015) 52 (4): 1121–1146.
Published: 29 July 2015
... due to death, migration, child relocation, union dissolution, and union formation from 2001–2011. Employing survival analysis, the article quantifies children’s risk of absence by cause and investigates sociodemographic variation in this risk. Of children born into two-parent households, 25...
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Journal Article
Analyzing migration decisions: the first step—whose decisions?
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Demography (1983) 20 (3): 299–311.
Published: 01 August 1983
.... About 25 percent of residential mobility and 40 percent of migration occurred under conditions of substantial constraint. Mobility was most often constrained by family dynamics; for migration, occupational relocations frequently imposed the decision-to-move process and determined destinations...
Journal Article
Natural Hazards, Disasters, and Demographic Change: The Case of Severe Tornadoes in the United States, 1980–2010
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Demography (2020) 57 (2): 653–674.
Published: 13 March 2020
... of a displacement process by which economically disadvantaged residents are forcibly mobile, and economically advantaged and White locals rebuild rather than relocate. To make sense of demographic change after natural hazards, I advance an unequal replacement of social vulnerability framework that considers hazard...
FIGURES
View articletitled, Natural Hazards, Disasters, and Demographic Change: The Case of Severe Tornadoes in the United States, 1980–2010
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for article titled, Natural Hazards, Disasters, and Demographic Change: The Case of Severe Tornadoes in the United States, 1980–2010
Includes: Supplementary data
Journal Article
Race and intra-urban migration
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Demography (1976) 13 (4): 571–575.
Published: 01 November 1976
... black and the remainder (257) were nonblack, primarily white. Of these, 575 families relocated within the city, and 173 left. The 575 fami- lies break down into 366 black and 209 nonblack. Specifically, the city's data describe the total flows of the 575 migrating families into and out of city census...
Journal Article
Spatial Variation In Migration Processes And Development: A Costa Rican Example Of Conventional Modeling Augmented By The Expansion Method
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Demography (1985) 22 (3): 327–352.
Published: 01 August 1985
... of relocation to i. given that migration has been decided upon. Hence, the migration rate between i andj (term (4)) is actually the joint probability that a potential migrant in i decides to seek a new residence (term (5)) and, having done so, chooses to relocate in j (term (6 Each dependent variable conforms...
View articletitled, Spatial Variation In Migration Processes And Development: A Costa Rican Example Of Conventional Modeling Augmented By The Expansion Method
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for article titled, Spatial Variation In Migration Processes And Development: A Costa Rican Example Of Conventional Modeling Augmented By The Expansion Method
Journal Article
Evacuees and Migrants Exhibit Different Migration Systems After the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami
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Demography (2020) 57 (4): 1437–1457.
Published: 19 May 2020
... : Springer . Koyama , S. , Aida , J. , Kawachi , I. , Kondo , N. , Subramanian , S. V. , Ito , K. , & . . . Osaka , K. ( 2014 ). Social support improves mental health among the victims relocated to temporary housing following the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami...
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Journal Article
Residential preferences and residential choices in a multiethnic context
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Demography (1992) 29 (3): 451–466.
Published: 01 August 1992
... of relocation between neighborhoods of different types (the revealed preferences), as well as the expressed or stated preferences. The race and ethnicity of census tracts were available from the 1980 census and from the Population Estimates and Projections (PEPS) of the Los Angeles County Health Department...
Journal Article
Reexamining the moving to opportunity study and its contribution to changing the distribution of poverty and ethnic concentration
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Demography (2008) 45 (3): 515–535.
Published: 01 August 2008
... residential segregation might also have the effect of increasing opportunities for labor market success. Some research suggested that relocation to suburban area would increase job opportunities for low- income populations, but other studies found high unemployment rates for suburban movers com- pared...
View articletitled, Reexamining the moving to opportunity study and its contribution to changing the distribution of poverty and ethnic concentration
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Journal Article
Comment on C. Gibson’s “Urbanization in New Zealand: A Comparative Analysis”
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Demography (1974) 11 (1): 149–150.
Published: 01 February 1974
... the manpower shortage that ac- companied World War II. By 1941 the government instituted the compulsory relocation of civilian workers, and in 1942 the Maori War Effort Organization included civilian Maoris in this scheme. An estimated 10,000 Maoris, nearly 25 percent of the adult population, were relocated...
Journal Article
Analyzing the Effect of Time in Migration Measurement Using Georeferenced Digital Trace Data
Open Access
Demography (2021) 58 (1): 51–74.
Published: 01 February 2021
... of the measurement. In terms of space, defining migration is complicated by the varying social, political, and economic meanings of the different geographic units between which people move. International migration is important for political reasons and is simple to conceptualize as a relocation across a national...
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