Volume 41 - Article 41 | Pages 1197–1204  

Editorial: The past, present, and future of Demographic Research

By Griffith Feeney, Nico Keilman, Carl Schmertmann, Jakub Bijak

Abstract

Contribution: As Demographic Research reaches 20 years of activity, encapsulated in 40 volumes freely accessible online, four of the editors who have led the journal during the period 1999–2019 reflect on its past, present, and future. The journal is a source of deep pride and passion, which we hope is shared by our whole community of readers, authors, reviewers, and editors. As we prepare for the next 20 years of this fascinating journey with Demographic Research, we look at the elements which have made the journal what it is today, and we consider how to meet the challenges of the future. We only deeply regret that the late Professor Jan M. Hoem (editor in 1999–2006) could not join us in this editorial endeavour.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Data errors in mortality estimation: Formal demographic analysis of under-registration, under-enumeration, and age misreporting
Volume 51 - Article 9

D-splines: Estimating rate schedules using high-dimensional splines with empirical demographic penalties
Volume 44 - Article 45

Revivorship and life lost to mortality
Volume 42 - Article 17

Mortality shifts and mortality compression in period and cohort life tables
Volume 41 - Article 40

Editorial: P-values, theory, replicability, and rigour
Volume 41 - Article 32

Quantifying paradigm change in demography
Volume 30 - Article 32

Integrating uncertainty in time series population forecasts: An illustration using a simple projection model
Volume 29 - Article 43

Reforging the Wedding Ring: Exploring a Semi-Artificial Model of Population for the United Kingdom with Gaussian process emulators
Volume 29 - Article 27

Probabilistic household forecasts based on register data- the case of Denmark and Finland
Volume 28 - Article 43

Stationary populations with below-replacement fertility
Volume 26 - Article 14

An editorial on plagiarism
Volume 24 - Article 17

Increments to life and mortality tempo
Volume 14 - Article 2

Quadratic spline fits by nonlinear least squares
Volume 12 - Article 5

A system of model fertility schedules with graphically intuitive parameters
Volume 9 - Article 5

Why population forecasts should be probabilistic - illustrated by the case of Norway
Volume 6 - Article 15

Estimating Parametric Fertility Models with Open Birth Interval Data
Volume 1 - Article 5