Structural and Cultural Determinants of Fertility in EuropeWarsaw School of Economics, 2007 - 218 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 37
Página 55
... macro - level determinants . The solution is provided by Coleman's concept of " methodological individualism " ( Coleman , 1994 ; de Bruijn , 1998 ; Udehn , 2002 ) , which takes into account both macro - level factors and micro - level ...
... macro - level determinants . The solution is provided by Coleman's concept of " methodological individualism " ( Coleman , 1994 ; de Bruijn , 1998 ; Udehn , 2002 ) , which takes into account both macro - level factors and micro - level ...
Página 56
... macro level leaves much unexplained concerning the underlying processes . First , showing the cross - sectional relations between two phenomena ( on the macro but also on the individual level ) does not answer the question about causal ...
... macro level leaves much unexplained concerning the underlying processes . First , showing the cross - sectional relations between two phenomena ( on the macro but also on the individual level ) does not answer the question about causal ...
Página 214
... macro characteristics . Absolute risks of job following first birth , per person months . . 105 121 134 135 154 6.4 Relative risks of job following first birth for Norwegian women , by selected individual and macro characteristics ...
... macro characteristics . Absolute risks of job following first birth , per person months . . 105 121 134 135 154 6.4 Relative risks of job following first birth for Norwegian women , by selected individual and macro characteristics ...
Contenido
Fertility in Europe | 15 |
1 | 33 |
Postponement and recuperation of fertility | 36 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
1965 birth cohort analysis Austria Belgium Bulgaria characterized childbirth childcare children per woman cohorts born completed fertility concerning costs of childbearing countries belonging cultural and structural Czech Republic differences duties East Central Europe East Germany Eastern Europe economic employment of mothers enter employment Esping-Andersen family policies fertility levels France Frejka and Sardon full-time employment gender groups of countries household human capital Hungary income individual Ireland Italy labor market level of childlessness level of fertility level of support low level macro methodological individualism motherhood Netherlands Nordic Nordic countries Norway number of children opportunity costs parents part-time employment part-time jobs period fertility rates Poland Portugal postponed births postponement of births postponement of childbearing preferences recuperation effect regimes respondents result risk roles Romania second birth selected European countries Slovenia sources of incompatibility Spain Sweden total fertility rates typology variables welfare West Central women born women's employment worker-carer model youngest cohorts
Referencias a este libro
Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe, Libro 3 Tomas Frejka,Jan Michael Hoem,Tomáš Sobotka Vista previa limitada - 2008 |