Volume 22 - Article 4 | Pages 95–114  

The negative educational gradients in Romanian fertility

By Cornelia Muresan, Jan M. Hoem

References

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Gjonca, A., Aassve, A., and Mencarini, L. (2008). Albania: Trends and patterns, proximate determinants and policies of fertility change. Demographic Research 19(11): 261-292.

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Hărăguş, P.-T. (2005). Folosirea timpului şi sarcinile domestice în Europa (Time use and domestic work in Europe). Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Sociologia 2: 95-116.

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Hoem, B. (1996). The social meaning of the age at second birth for third-birth fertility: A methodological note on the need to sometimes re-specify an intermediate variable. Yearbook of Population Research in Finland 33: 333-339.

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Hoem, J.M. and Kreyenfeld, M. (2006). Anticipatory analysis and its alternatives in life-course research. Part 1: The role of education in the study of first childbearing. Demographic Research 15(16): 461-484.

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Hoem, J.M., Prskawetz, A., and Neyer, G.R. (2001). Autonomy or conservative adjustment? The effect of public policies and educational attainment on third births in Austria, 1975-96. Population Studies 55(3): 249-261.

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Köppen, K. (2006). Second births in Western Germany and France. Demographic Research 14(14): 295-330.

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Koytcheva, E. (2006). Social-demographic differences of fertility and union formation in Bulgaria before and after the start of the societal transition. [PhD dissertation]. University of Rostock, Available from the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research.

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Kravdal, Ø. (2004). An illustration of the problems caused by incomplete education histories in fertility analyses. Demographic Research SC3(6): 135-154.

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Kravdal, Ø. (2001). The high fertility of college educated women in Norway: An artefact of separate modelling of each parity transition. Demographic Research 5(6): 185-215.

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Kreyenfeld, M. (2002). Time-squeeze, partner effect or self-selection? An investigation into the positive effect of women's education on second birth risks in West Germany. Demographic Research 7(2): 15-47.

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Kreyenfeld, M. and Zabel, C. (2005). Female education and the second child: Great Britain and Western Germany compared. Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaften/Schmollers Jahrbuch 125: 145-156.

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McDonald, P. (2000). Gender equity, social institutions and the future of fertility. Journal of Population Research 17(1): 1-16.

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Mureşan, C. (2008). Impact of induced abortion on fertility in Romania. European Journal of Population 24(4): 425-446.

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Mureşan, C. (1996). L'évolution démographique en Roumanie: Tendances passées (1948-1994) et perspectives d'avenir (1995-2030). Population Research and Policy Review 51(4/5): 813-844.

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Mureşan, C., Hărăguş, P.-T., Hărăguş, M., and Schröder, C. (2008). Overview Chapter 6: Romania: Childbearing metamorphosis within a changing context. Demographic Research 19(23): 855-906.

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Oláh, L. (2003). Gendering fertility: second births in Sweden and Hungary. Population Research and Policy Review 22(2): 171-200.

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Perelli-Harris, B. (2008). Ukraine: On the border between old and new in uncertain times. Demographic Research 19(29): 1145-1178.

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Zabel, C. (2009). Do imputed educational histories provide satisfactory results in fertility analysis in the West German context? Demographic Research 21(6): 135-176.

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