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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1957) 37 (4): 463–470.
Published: 01 November 1957
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1941) 21 (4): 683.
Published: 01 November 1941
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in Panama’s Generation of ’31: Patriots, Praetorians, and a Deeade of Discord
> Hispanic American Historical Review
Published: 01 November 1996
FIGURE 5: Rate of Migration to Panama City and Colón, 1916-1940 (per thousand inhabitants) Source: Estadística Panameña 6:6 (June 1947), 1-4.
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in Panama’s Generation of ’31: Patriots, Praetorians, and a Deeade of Discord
> Hispanic American Historical Review
Published: 01 November 1996
FIGURE 6: Rate of Illegitimacy per Year in Santa Ana Parish, Panama City, 1898-1931 (percent) Source: Parish records, Santa Ana church, vols. 1-7.
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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1967) 47 (4): 541–542.
Published: 01 November 1967
...Robert E. Nunley Birth Rates in Latin America: New Estimates of Historical Trends and Fluctuations . By Collver O. Andrew . Berkeley , 1965 . University of California . Institute of International Studies . Tables. Figures. Notes. Appendix. Bibliography . Pp. 187 . Paper . $2.50...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1954) 34 (1): 1–19.
Published: 01 February 1954
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in Not Just Color: Whiteness, Nation, and Status in Latin America
> Hispanic American Historical Review
Published: 01 August 2013
Figure 1 Distribution of ethnoracial groups by skin color rating. The mulatto category includes morenos in Venezuela and mestizos/indios in the Dominican Republic.
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in Foreign Markets, Domestic Initiative, and the Emergence of a Monocrop Economy: The Yucatecan Experience, 1825-1903
> Hispanic American Historical Review
Published: 01 November 1992
FIGURE 3: Comparative Annual Peso and Dollar Prices, 1880-1903 Sources: Exchange rate as of January 1 determined by the U. S. Treasury Department, Bureau of the Mint, 1880-1892, quarterly 1892-1905, published in Annual Report of the Secretary of the Treasury . Silver exchange rate also in U. S
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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2020) 100 (3): 423–461.
Published: 01 August 2020
... and their closest colonial cities. I then analyze gender ratios in census records from those pueblos. The results suggest that Indian pueblos with large male majorities were generally within a day's walk of a colonial city. Presumably, the male majorities indicate high rates of female out-migration for work...
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Published: 01 May 1985
GRAPH 9: Slope of the line (regression coefficient as log); 1701-1800=0.003132; 1701-1751=0.002992; 1752-1800=0.004446. Rate of growth (percent per annum): 1701-1800=0.7; 1701-1751=0.7; 1752-1800= 1.0. R-squared: 1701-1800=0.83.
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Published: 01 November 1983
GRAPH 1: * The wages are taken from labor contracts, libretas , and petitions and are converted into United States gold using the ratios in John Parke Young, Central American Currency and Finance (Princeton, 1925), p. 39; where the rate of conversion varied during the year, that most
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Published: 01 May 1985
GRAPH 1: Slope of the line (regression coefficient as log): 1525-1819 = 0.002218; 1525-1644 = 0.010435; 1661-1819=0.001830. Rate of growth (% per annum): 1525-1819 = 0.5; 1525-1644 = 2.4; 1661-1819 = 0.4. R-squared, two dummy variables (1525-1641/1661-1819)=.50.
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Published: 01 May 1985
GRAPH 2: Slope of the line (regression coefficient as log); 1525-1819=0.001787; 1525-1644=0.009507; 1661-1819=0.002347. Rate of growth (% per annum): 1525-1819=0.4; 1525-1644=2.2; 1661-1819=0.5. R-squared (two dummy variables 1525-1644/1661-1819) =.51.
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Published: 01 May 1985
GRAPH 3: Slope of the line (regression coefficient as log); 1661-1809=0.001800; 1661-1750=0.001354; 1751-1809=0.008661 Rate of growth (% per annum): 1661-1809=0.4; 1661-1750=0.3; 1751-1809=2.0 R-squared (two dummy variables 1661-1750/1751-1809) = .57.
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Published: 01 May 1985
GRAPH 6: Slope of the line (regression coefficient as log); 1700-1789 = 0.002577; 1715-1789 = 0.004547; 1715-1750 = 0.013581; 1751-1789 = 0.011936. Rate of growth (% per annum): 1700-1789 = 0.6; 1715-1789=1.1; 1715-1750 = 3.2; 1751-1789 = 2.8. R-squared (with two dummy variables. 1715-1750/1751
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Published: 01 May 1985
GRAPH 7: Slope of the line (regression coefficient as log): 1744-1799=0.004732; 1744-1750=0.107419; 1751-1786=0.012972; 1787-1799=-0.031462. Rate of growth (% per annum): 1744-1799=1.1; 1744-1750 = 28.1; 1751-1786=3.0; 1787-1799=-6.9. R-squared (with three dummy variables, 1744-1750/1751-1786
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Published: 01 May 1985
GRAPH 8: Slope of the line (regression coefficient as log): 1680-1810=0.002590; 1700-1809=0.006564; 1715-1751=0.011091; 1752-1809=0.007232; 1751-1786= 0.006082. Rate of growth (percent per annum): 1680-1810 = 1.4; 1700-1809=1.5; 1715-1751 = 2.6; 1752-1809=1.7; 1751-1786=1.4. R-squared: 1680
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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2008) 88 (2): 313–315.
Published: 01 May 2008
... take up topics more typically engaged by the social sciences. The rich and useful social scientific literature devoted to suicide is largely quantitative in method and is focused on the intersection of serial data sets, teasing out the relationship of suicide rates to demographic and economic variables...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1971) 51 (2): 237–249.
Published: 01 May 1971
..., 1969; Gómez, Análisis de los censos , p. 25. The figure for voters under age 21 could be either halved or doubled, without making much difference in the national rate of voter participation. 13 Gómez, Análisis de los censos , p. 40, gives the rate of increase between the 1843 and 1851 censuses...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1972) 52 (3): 535.
Published: 01 August 1972
... Copyright 1972 by Duke University Press 1972 Like death and taxes, increases in journal subscription rates seem to be inevitable. Almost a year ago, Duke University Press alerted us to the likelihood of a sizeable increase in HAHR rates effective in 1973. During this past spring...
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