Content
2024, Volume 22, Issue 1
- 1-1 Gender, climate and landowning: Sources of variability in the weather pattern change and ideal fertility relationship in Sahelian West Africa
by Isabel H. McLoughlin Brooks - 1-1 Temperature- and seasonality-related infectious disease mortality among infants: A retrospective time-series study of Sweden, 1868–1892
by Johan Junkka & Maria Hiltunen - 1-1 Climate, conflict and internal migration in Colombia
by Katharina Fenz & Thomas Mitterling & Jesus Crespo Cuaresma & Isabell Roitner-Fransecky - 1-1 Re-examining the role of population policies in climate action
by Shonali Pachauri - 1-1 Urban–rural differences in mortality during the 2010 heatwave in European Russia
by Mikhail Maksimenko & Sergey Timonin & Natalia Shartova & Mikhail Varentsov - 1-1 Temperatures, conflict and forced migration in West Asia and North Africa
by Jasmin Abdel Ghany - 1-1 Relevance of population mobility for climate change mitigation
by Susana B. Adamo - 1-1 Impact of urban outdoor thermal conditions on selected hospital admissions in Novi Sad, Serbia
by Daniela Arsenović & Stevan Savić & Dragan Milošević & Zorana Lužanin & Milena Kojić & Ivana Radić & Sanja Harhaji & Miodrag Arsić - 1-1 Projecting environmental impacts with varying population, affluence and technology using IPAT – Climate change and land use scenarios
by Emma Engström & Martin Kolk - 1-1 Extreme temperatures and morbidity in old age in Europe
by Francesca Zanasi & Risto Conte Keivabu - 1-1 Overshooting global warming and overshooting fertility decline. Beyond the smooth stabilization paradigm
by Wolfgang Lutz - 1-1 Migration and erosion in tidal and river channels in Bangladesh
by Katharine M. Donato & Leslie Valentine & Amanda Carrico & Carol A. Wilson & Kimberly G. Rogers & Timo Tonassi - 1-1 Understanding the complex relationship between population and climate change mitigation
by Nyovani J. Madise & Naa Dodua Dodoo & John A. Mushomi & Chifuniro S. Mankhwala - 1-1 Attending to history in climate change–demography research
by Emily Klancher Merchant & Kathryn Grace
2023, Volume 21, Issue 1
- 1-11 Population decline: Towards a rational, scientific research agenda
by Zuzanna Brzozowska & Ekaterina Zhelenkova & Stuart Gietel-Basten - 15-20 Like high cholesterol, population decline is a problem, but not in the way you might think..
by Wendy Sigle - 21-39 The human eco-predicament: Overshoot and the population conundrum
by William E. Rees - 41-55 Population decline will likely become a global trend and benefit long-term human wellbeing
by Wolfgang Lutz - 57-68 Depopulation or population decline? Demographic nightmares and imaginaries
by Stuart Gietel-Basten - 69-80 A governance perspective on East Central Europe’s population predicament: Young exit, grey voice and lopsided loyalty
by Pieter Vanhuysse - 81-92 Low, but not too low, fertility can represent a positive development
by Vegard Skirbekk - 93-103 The key role of early education in an ageing and shrinking population: The example of Germany
by Elke Loichinger & C. Katharina Spiess - 107-147 Implementing youth-oriented policies: A remedy for depopulation in rural regions?
by Martina Schorn - 151-178 Revisiting the impact of urban shrinkage on residential segregation in European cities
by David Huntington - 181-209 Immigration and the prospects for long-run population decreases in European countries
by Nick Parr - 211-243 How much would reduced emigration mitigate ageing in Norway?
by Marianne Tønnessen & Astri Syse - 245-275 The triple burden of depopulation in Ukraine: examining perceptions of population decline
by Brienna Perelli-Harris & Yuliya Hilevych - 277-309 Is Spanish depopulation irreversible? Recent demographic and spatial changes in small municipalities
by Fernando Gil-Alonso & Jordi Bayona-i-Carrasco & Isabel Pujadas-Rúbies - 311-338 Neighbourhood effects and determinants of population changes in Italy: A spatial perspective
by Federico Benassi & Annalisa Busetta & Gerardo Gallo & Manuela Stranges - 339-360 Demographic sustainability in Italian territories: The link between depopulation and population ageing
by Cecilia Reynaud & Sara Miccoli - 361-415 Parsimonious stochastic forecasting of international and internal migration on the NUTS-3 level – an outlook of regional depopulation trends in Germany
by Patrizio Vanella & Timon Hellwagner & Philipp Deschermeier - 419-443 Depopulation in Moldova: The main challenge in the context of extremly high emigration
by Olga Gagauz & Tatiana Tabac & Irina Pahomii
2022, Volume 20, Issue 1
- 1-11 The population aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic in 20 papers: an introduction
by Paola Di Giulio & Anne Goujon & Guillaume Marois - 15-37 Aspects of a sociology of the pandemic: Inequalities and the life course
by Karl Ulrich Mayer - 39-81 COVID-19, the Russo-Ukrainian War, the global sustainable development project and post-crises demography
by F. Landis MacKellar - 85-106 Effects of income inequality on COVID-19 infections and deaths during the first wave of the pandemic: Evidence from European countries
by David A. Sánchez-Páez - 107-141 Assessing the generational impact of COVID-19 using National Transfer Accounts (NTAs)
by Miguel Sánchez-Romero - 143-166 The mathematics of the reproduction number R for Covid-19: A primer for demographers
by Luis Rosero-Bixby & Tim Miller - 167-193 Pitfalls and solutions in case fatality risk estimation – A multi-country analysis on the effects of demographics, surveillance, time lags between case reports and deaths and healthcare system capacity on COVID-19 CFR estimates
by Patrizio Vanella & Christian Wiessner & Anja Holz & Gérard Krause & Annika Möhl & Sarah Wiegel & Berit Lange & Heiko Becher - 195-221 COVID-19 and relationship quality: Emotional, paid work and organizational spheres
by Daniela Bellani & Daniele Vignoli - 223-260 Narratives of the future and fertility decision-making in uncertain times. An application to the COVID-19 pandemic
by Raffaele Guetto & Giacomo Bazzani & Daniele Vignoli - 261-284 Cognitive schemas and fertility motivations in the U.S. during the COVID-19 pandemic
by Wendy D. Manning & Karen Benjamin Guzzo & Monica A. Longmore & Peggy C. Giordano - 285-282 Human costs of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the major epicentres in Italy
by Simone Ghislandi & Raya Muttarak & Markus Sauerberg & Benedetta Scotti - 317-348 Excess mortality and COVID-19 in Sweden in 2020: A demographic account
by Martin Kolk & Sven Drefahl & Matthew Wallace & Gunnar Andersson - 349-365 Regional COVID-19 mortality in Brazil by age
by Emerson A. Baptista & Bernardo L. Queiroz & Everton E. C. Lima - 367-390 Are homicides and robberies associated with mortality due to COVID-19? Lessons from Urban Mexico
by Claudia Masferrer & Oscar Rodríguez Chávez - 393-414 Assessing excess mortality in Vienna and Austria after the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic
by Ramon Bauer & Markus Speringer & Peter Frühwirt & Roman Seidl & Franz Trautinger - 415-435 COVID-19 in Hong Kong: Policies and community actions mitigate the effects of age structure and population density
by Zilin Li & Stuart A. Gietel-Basten & Rachel Ganly & Christian Joy Pattawi Cruz - 437-457 Rapid changes in birth counts in Brazilian major cities during the COVID-19 pandemic
by Everton C. Lima & Camila F. Soares & José H. C. Monteiro da Silva - 459-476 Pregnancies and contraceptive use in four African countries during the COVID-19 pandemic
by Andreas Backhaus - 477-498 Exploring psychological vulnerability and responses to the COVID-19 lockdown in Greece
by Lydia Xourafi & Polyxeni Sardi & Anastasia Kostaki - 499-526 Why did care home residents face an elevated risk of death from COVID-19? A demographic perspective using data from Belgium and from England and Wales
by Nicole Mun Sim Lai - 527-542 Comparing the loss of life expectancy at birth during the 2020 and 1918 pandemics in six European countries
by Valentin Rousson & Fred Paccaud & Isabella Locatelli
2021, Volume 19, Issue 1
- 1-11 A demographic perspective on human wellbeing: Concepts, measurement and population heterogeneity
by Sonja Spitzer & Vanessa Di Lego & Angela Greulich & Raya Muttarak - 15-21 EU and UK targets for healthy life expectancy – are they achievable?
by Carol Jagger - 23-28 Demography and well-being
by Andrew E. Clark - 29-37 Sustainable human wellbeing: What can demography contribute?
by Wolfgang Lutz - 39-64 WELLBYs, cost-benefit analyses and the Easterlin Discount
by Paul Frijters - 67-89 Comparing global reports of subjective well-being to experiential measures
by Richard E. Lucas - 91-123 Anthropometric history and the measurement of wellbeing
by Bernard Harris - 127-140 Going beyond GDP with a parsimonious indicator: inequality-adjusted healthy lifetime income
by David E. Bloom & Victoria Y. Fan & Vadim Kufenko & Osondu Ogbuoji & Klaus Prettner & Gavin Yamey - 141-167 Global improvements in Years of Good Life since 1950
by Erich Striessnig & Claudia Reiter & Anna Dimitrova - 169-190 Mortality evolution in Algeria: What can we learn about data quality?
by Farid Flici & Nacer-Eddine Hammouda - 191-213 Gender disparities in health at older ages and their consequences for well-being in Latin America and the Caribbean
by Marília R. Nepomuceno & Vanessa di Lego & Cássio M. Turra - 215-254 Gender and socioeconomic inequalities in health and wellbeing across age in France and Switzerland
by Anna Barbuscia & Chiara Comolli - 255-291 Understanding women’s well-being in Turkey
by Dilek Yıldız & Hilal Arslan & Alanur Çavlin - 293-318 The age U-shape in Europe: the protective role of partnership
by Andrew E. Clark & Hippolyte d’Albis & Angela Greulich - 319-353 Singles in the city: happily ever after?
by Bernhard Riederer & Nina-Sophie Fritsch & Lena Seewann - 355-382 Fathers’ and mothers’ enjoyment of childcare: the role of multitasking
by Marina Zannella & Alessandra De Rose - 383-415 Well-being in Europe: decompositions by country and gender for the population aged 50+
by Claudia Reiter & Sonja Spitzer - 417-466 The life course and subjective well-being across generations – an analysis based on cross-national surveys (2002–2016)
by Hideko Matsuo & Koen Matthijs - 467-502 Academic track mismatch and the temporal development of well-being and competences in German secondary education
by Felix Bittmann - 503-543 Is educational wellbeing associated with grade repetition and school dropout rates among Indian students? Evidence from a panel study
by Paul Ronak & Rashmi - 547-583 Years of Good Life: An illustration of a new well-being indicator using data for Thailand
by Thananon Buathong & Anna Dimitrova & Paolo Miguel M. Vicerra & Montakarn Chimmamee
2020, Volume 18, Issue 1
- 1-24 Introduction: the relevance of studying fertility across time and space
by Tomáš Sobotka - 27-32 International political economy and future fertility trends
by Alícia Adserà - 33-37 Moving out the parental home and partnership formation as social determinants of low fertility
by Albert Esteve & Diederik Boertien & Ryohei Mogi & Mariona Lozano - 39-42 “Catching up with ‘compressed modernity”’ - How the values of Millennials and Gen-Z’ers could reframe gender equity and demographic systems
by Stuart Gietel-Basten - 43-48 Future fertility trends are shaped at the intersection of gender and social stratification
by Trude Lappegård - 49-61 The wish for a child
by Anna Rotkirch - 63-70 Fertility will be determined by the changing ideal family size and the empowerment to reach these targets
by Wolfgang Lutz - 71-79 Marriage will (continue to) be the key to the future of fertility in Japan and East Asia
by Setsuya Fukuda - 83-120 Ultra-low fertility in East Asia: Confucianism and its discontents
by Yen-hsin Alice Cheng - 123-140 Laggards in the global fertility transition
by David Shapiro & Andrew Hinde - 141-166 Projecting future births with fertility differentials reflecting women’s educational and migrant characteristics
by Michaela Potančoková & Guillaume Marois - 167-184 Decomposing changes in first birth trends: Quantum, timing, or variance
by Ryohei Mogi & Michael Dominic del Mundo - 185-213 What factors support the early age patterns of fertility in a developing country: the case of Kyrgyzstan
by Konstantin Kazenin & Vladimir Kozlov - 215-236 Marital fertility decline and child mortality in the Sardinian longevity Blue Zone
by Michel Poulain & Dany Chambre & Pino Ledda & Anne Herm - 237-263 Future orientation and fertility: cross-national evidence using Google search
by Nicolò Cavalli - 267-284 Selected Wittgenstein Centre databases on fertility across time and space
by Kryštof Zeman & Tomáš Sobotka
2019, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 001-005 Analyzing population ageing and intergenerational redistribution: NTA and AGENTA
by Ronald Lee & Andrew Mason - 009-036 Welfare state winners and losers in ageing societies
by Miguel Sánchez-Romero & Gemma Abío & Montserrat Botey & Alexia Prskawetz & Joze Sambt & Meritxell Solé Juvés & Guadalupe Souto & Lili Vargha & Concepció Patxot - 037-069 Intergenerational inequalities in mortality-adjusted disposable incomes
by Hippolyte d’Albis & Ikpidi Badji - 071-097 Welfare state and the age distribution of public consumption and public transfers in the EU countries
by Agnieszka Chło´n-Domi´nczak & Anita Abramowska-Kmon & Irena E. Kotowska & Wojciech Łatkowski & Paweł Strzelecki - 099-120 Extending working life: experiences from Sweden, 1981–2011
by Haodong Qi & Kirk Scott & Tommy Bengtsson - 121-140 Historical patterns of unpaid work in Europe: NTTA results by age and gender
by Ana Seme & Lili Vargha & Tanja Istenic & Joze Sambt - 141-162 Italians’ use of time during the economic crisis: implications for the gender division of labour
by Marina Zannella & Alessandra De Rose - 163-197 Transfers of informal care time in the United States: the role of demographic differentials in intergenerational flows by age, sex, and racial and national background
by Denys Dukhovnov & Emilio Zagheni - 201-221 European National (Time) Transfer Accounts
by Tanja Istenic & Bernhard Hammer & Alexia Prskawetz
2018, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 001-005 Broadening demographic horizons: demographic studies beyond age and gender
by Alexia Prskawetz & Warren C. Sanderson & Sergei Scherbov - 009-014 Are there principles of demography? A search for unifying (and hegemonic) themes
by William P. Butz - 015-023 Can Taylor’s law of fluctuation scaling and its relatives help demographers select more plausible multi-regional population forecasts?
by Joel E. Cohen & Helge Brunborg & Meng Xu - 025-035 Probabilistic demographic forecasts
by Nico Keilman - 037-053 Education and demography: a review of world population and human capital in the 21st century
by Philip Rees - 057-081 Population dynamics and human capital in Muslim countries
by Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi & Gavin W. Jones - 083-110 Survival inequalities and redistribution in the Italian pension system
by Graziella Caselli & Rosa Maria Lipsi - 111-134 Does education matter? – economic dependency ratios by education
by Alexia Prskawetz & Bernhard Hammer - 135-162 Multistate projections of Australia’s Indigenous population: interacting area group and identification status change
by James Raymer & Yanlin Shi & James O’Donnell & Nicholas Biddle - 163-175 The end of population aging in high-income countries
by Warren C. Sanderson & Sergei Scherbov & Patrick Gerland - 177-198 From intentions to births: paths of realisation in a multi-dimensional life course
by Maria Rita Testa & Francesco Rampazzo - 199-218 Towards causal forecasting of international migration
by Frans Willekens - 221-234 Summary of ‘Demographic and human capital scenarios for the 21st century: 2018 assessment for 201 countries’
by Nicholas Gailey & Wolfgang Lutz - 235-257 “Express transitioning” as a special case of the demographic transition
by Marc Luy & Bernhard Köppen
2017, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 001-16 Introduction: education and fertility in low-fertility settings
by Tomáš Sobotka & Éva Beaujouan & Jan Van Bavel - 019-25 The future fertility of highly educated women: the role of educational composition shifts and labor market barriers
by Alícia Adserà - 027-31 Education empowers women to reach their personal fertility target, regardless of what the target is
by Wolfgang Lutz - 033-40 Will highly educated women have more children in the future? Looking at reproductive plans and outcomes
by Maria Rita Testa - 041-47 What do men want? The growing importance of men’s characteristics for fertility
by Jan Van Bavel - 049-54 Will highly educated women have more children in the future? In Southern Europe, it will largely depend on labour market conditions
by Diego Ramiro-Fariñas & Francisco J. Viciana-Fernández & Víctor Montañés Cobo - 055-59 Education, gender revolution, and fertility recovery
by Gøsta Esping-Andersen - 063-94 Education and fertility in the context of rising inequality
by Alícia Adserà - 095-120 Cross-national differences in the association between educational attainment and completed fertility. Do welfare regimes matter?
by Eva-Maria Merz & Aart C. Liefbroer - 121-141 The role of values and of socioeconomic status in the education-fertility link among men and women
by Martin Lakomý - 143-179 Pathways to marital and non-marital first birth: the role of his and her education
by Alessandra Trimarchi & Jan Van Bavel - 181-213 Differences in partnership and marital status at first birth by women’s and their partners’ education: evidence from Britain 1991–2012
by Nitzan Peri-Rotem & Jacqueline Scott - 215-237 Do different educational pairings lead to different fertility outcomes? A cohort perspective for the Greek case
by Christos Bagavos - 239-267 Educational field and fertility in western Germany: an analysis of women born between 1955 and 1959
by Anja Oppermann - 269-291 Fertility and education among British Asian women: a success story of social mobility?
by Sylvie Dubuc - 293-330 The educational gradient of fertility intentions: a meta-analysis of European studies
by Maria Rita Testa & Fabian Stephany
2016, Volume 14, Issue 1
- 001-4 Introduction
by Warren Sanderson & Sergei Scherbov - 007-40 A unifying framework for the study of population aging
by Warren Sanderson & Sergei Scherbov - 041-66 Towards a reconceptualising of population ageing in emerging markets
by Stuart Gietel-Basten & Sergei Scherbov & Warren Sanderson - 067-88 Population ageing dynamics in the North Atlantic region of the Arctic
by Anastasia Emelyanova & Arja Rautio - 089-106 Certain characteristics of population ageing using a prospective approach: Serbia as a case study
by Jelena Stojilkovic Gnjatovic & Mirjana Devedzic - 107-130 The impact of physical health on the postponement of retirement
by Michael Boissonneault & Joop de Beer - 131-154 Adjusting prospective old-age thresholds by health status: empirical findings and implications. A case study of Italy
by Elena Demuru & Viviana Egidi - 155-186 Measuring dependency ratios using National Transfer Accounts
by Mikkel Christoffer Barslund & Marten von Werder - 187-228 Subjective survival expectations and observed survival: How consistent are they?
by Alberto Palloni & Beatriz Novak - 229-254 Time-to-death patterns in markers of age and dependency
by Tim Riffe & Pil H. Chung & Jeroen Spijker & John MacInnes - 255-277 A cross-national comparison of 12 biomarkers finds no universal biomarkers of aging among individuals aged 60 and older
by David H. Rehkopf & Luis Rosero-Bixby & William H. Dow
2015, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 1-13 What can demographers contribute to the study of vulnerability?
by Raya Muttarak & Wolfgang Lutz & Leiwen Jiang - 15-18 Engagement of demographers in environmental issues from a historical perspective
by Peter McDonald - 19-22 The next best time for demographers to contribute to climate change research
by Anastasia J. Gage - 23-28 Will climate change shift demography’s ‘normal science’?
by Lori M Hunter & Jane Menken - 29-32 Barriers to involvement of Chinese demographers in climate change research
by Xizhe Peng & Qin Zhu - 33-36 Population dynamics and climate change: A challenging frontier for the intrepid demographer
by Adrian C. Hayes - 37-46 Two statements on population and sustainable development produced by global scientific panels in 2002 and 2012
by Wolfgang Lutz - 47-70 Differential mortality patterns from hydro-meteorological disasters: Evidence from cause-of-death data by age and sex
by Emilio Zagheni & Raya Muttarak & Erich Striessnig - 71-90 Daily mortality changes in Taiwan in the 1970s: An examination of the relationship between temperature and mortality
by Zhongwei Zhao & Yuan Zhu & Edward Jow-Chung Tu - 91-129 Assessing the effectiveness of a social vulnerability index in predicting heterogeneity in the impacts of natural hazards: Case study of the Tropical Storm Washi flood in the Philippines
by J. Andres F. Ignacio & Grace T. Cruz & Fernando Nardi & Sabine Henry - 131-165 Social vulnerability to floods in two coastal megacities: New York City and Mumbai
by Alex de Sherbinin & Guillem Bardy - 167-191 Who perceives what? A demographic analysis of subjective perception in rural Thailand
by Jacqueline Meijer-Irons - 193-220 Who is concerned about and takes action on climate change? Gender and education divides among Thais
by Raya Muttarak & Thanyaporn Chankrajang - 221-240 Future differential vulnerability to natural disasters by level of education
by Erich Striessnig & Elke Loichinger - 241-262 The demography of human development and climate change vulnerability: A projection exercise
by Jesús Crespo Cuaresma & Wolfgang Lutz - 263-287 A four-dimensional population module for the analysis of future adaptive capacity in the Phang Nga province of Thailand
by Elke Loichinger & Samir KC & Wolfgang Lutz
2014, Volume 12, Issue 1
- 1-22 Health, education, and retirement over the prolonged life cycle: a selective survey of recent research
by Michael Kuhn & Alexia Prskawetz & Uwe Sunde - 23-52 What can reverse causation tell us about demographic differences in the social network and social support determinants of self-rated health in later life?
by Heather Booth & Pilar Rioseco & Heather Crawford - 53-82 The effect of retirement on self-reported health: a gender comparison in Italy
by Lucia Coppola & Daniele Spizzichino - 83-114 Real wage and labor supply in a quasi life-cycle framework: a macro compression by Swedish National Transfer Accounts (1985-2003)
by Haodong Qi - 115-140 Working after age 50 in Spain. Is the trend towards early retirement reversing?
by Madelín Goméz-León & Pau Miret-Gamundi - 141-168 Retirement and leisure: a longitudinal study using Swedish data
by Linda Kridahl - 169-192 More with less: the Almost Ideal Pension Systems (AIPS)
by Gustavo DeSantis - 193-209 How large are the effects of population aging on economic inequality?
by Joshua R. Goldstein & Ronald D. Lee
2013, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 1-13 Determinants of unusual and differential longevity: an introduction
by Graziella Caselli & Marc Luy - 15-36 Mortality deceleration is not informative of unobserved heterogeneity in open groups
by Elizabeth Wrigley-Field - 37-69 Modal age at death: lifespan indicator in the era of longevity extension
by Shiro Horiuchi & Nadine Ouellette & Siu Lan Karen Cheung & Jean-Marie Robine - 71-85 Surviving to be the oldest old—destiny or chance?
by Jon Anson - 87-108 The Blue Zones: areas of exceptional longevity around the world
by Michel Poulain & Anne Herm & Gianni Pes - 109-136 The Nicoya region of Costa Rica: a high longevity island for elderly males
by Luis Rosero-Bixby & William H. Dow & David H. Rehkopf - 137-163 Regional hot spots of exceptional longevity in Germany
by Sebastian Klüsener & Rembrandt D. Scholz - 165-183 Lifetime abstainers and mortality risk in the United States
by Richard G. Rogers & Patrick M. Krueger & Richard Miech & Elizabeth M. Lawrence - 185-204 The longevity of academicians: evidence from the Saxonian Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Leipzig
by Maria Winkler-Dworak & Heiner Kaden - 205-218 Evidence of resiliency among long-lived smokers
by Morgan E. Levine & Eileen M. Crimmins - 219-246 Ethnicity, russification and excess mortality in Kazakhstan
by Ethan J. Sharygin & Michel Guillot - 247-266 Exploring Sardinian longevity: women fertility and parental transmission of longevity
by Graziella Caselli & Rosa Maria Lipsi & Enrica Lapucci & James W. Vaupel - 267-294 Maternal age, birth order and other early-life factors: a family-level approach to exploring exceptional survival
by Valérie Jarry & Alain Gagnon & Robert Bourbeau - 295-323 Determinants of exceptional human longevity: new ideas and findings
by Leonid A. Gavrilov & Natalia S. Gavrilova - 325-349 Familial transmission of human longevity: a population-based study in an inland village of Sardinia (Italy), 1850–2010
by Luisa Salaris & Nicola Tedesco & Michel Poulain
2012, Volume 10, Issue 1
- 1-8 Education and the Global Fertility Transition
by K.S. James & Vegard Skirbekk & Jan Van Bavel - 9-30 Women’s education and fertility transition in sub-Saharan Africa
by David Shapiro - 31-48 A reassessment of the effects of female education and employment on fertility in Nigeria
by Onipede Wusu - 49-76 One or two pathways to individual modernity? The effects of education on family formation among women in Japan and Germany
by Bernhard Nauck & Rokuro Tabuchi - 77-94 Spousal and parental roles among female student populations in 55 low- and middleincome countries
by Albert Esteve & Jeroen Spijker & Tim Riffe & Joan Garcia - 95-126 Number of children and cognitive abilities in later life
by Valeria Bordone & Daniela Weber - 127-154 The reversal of gender inequality in education, union formation and fertility in Europe
by Jan Van Bavel
2011, Volume 9, Issue 1
- 1-9 INTRODUCTION - Reproductive decision-making: towards improved theoretical, methodological and empirical approaches
by Maria Rita Testa & Philip S. Morgan & Tomáš Sobotka - 11-18 DEMOGRAPHIC DEBATE - Is the Theory of Planned Behaviour an appropriate model for human fertility?
by Christine A. Bachrach & Philip S. Morgan - 19-29 Comparing the TPB and the T-D-I-B framework
by Warren B. Miller - 31-35 The Theory of Planned Behaviour: considering drives, proximity and dynamics
by Jennifer S. Barber - 37-45 Theories on fertility intentions: a demographer’s perspective
by Dimiter Philipov - 47-54 The Theory of Planned Behaviour as a model of reasoning about fertility decisions
by Jane Klobas - 55-62 On the usefulness of the Theory of Planned Behaviour for fertility research
by Aart C. Liefbroer - 63-69 Reflections on Morgan and Bachrach’s critique
by Icek Ajzen - 71-74 Further reflections on the Theory of Planned Behaviour and fertility research
by Christine A. Bachrach & Philip S. Morgan - 75-98 REFEREED ARTICLES - Differences between fertility desires and intentions: implications for theory, research and policy
by Warren B. Miller - 99-129 Uncertainty in fertility intentions in Britain, 1979-2007
by Máire Ní Bhrolcháin & Éva Beaujouan - 131-156 Fertility preferences: what measuring second choices teaches us
by Anne Gauthier & Christoph Bühler & Joshua Goldstein & Saskia Hin - 157-178 Couples’ childbearing behaviour in Italy: which of the partners is leading it?
by Alessandro Rosina & Laura Cavalli & Maria Rita Testa