Hits 1-10 within 22 documents
The interplay between infant mortality and subsequent reproductive behaviour: evidence for the replacement effect from historical population of Bejsce Parish, 18th-20th centuries, Poland [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 30 (2005) 3. p.240-264
The development of population history ('historical demography') in Great Britian from the late nineteenth century to the early 1960s [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 31 (2006) 4. p.34-63
Geburtenplanung, soziale Ungleichheit und Geschlecht: das Beispiel Stuttgart während der Industrialisierung [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 32 (2007) 2. p.111-136
When protoindustry collapsed fertility and the demographic regime in rural Eastern Belgium during the industrial revolution [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 32 (2007) 2. p.137-159
Living conditions during childhood and survival in later life: study design and first results [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 30 (2005) 3. p.265-285
Of grandmothers, grandfathers and wicked step-grandparents: differential impact of paternal grandparents on grandoffspring survival [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 30 (2005) 3. p.219-239
Fertility of populations as a function of the attained level of life expectancy in the course of human evolution [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 21 (1996) 4. p.24-55
Wenn das Leben mit dem Tod beginnt: Säuglingssterblichkeit und Gesellschaft in historischer Perspektive [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 34 (2009) 4. p.66-82
Nischentransfer und Protoindustrie auf dem Prüfstand der statistischen Analyse: Determinanten kurzfristiger Heiratsschwankungen im Altkreis Tecklenburg, 1750-1870 [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 28 (2003) 3. p.110-140
Lovely little angels in heaven? The influence of religiously determined cultural life scripts on infant survival in the Netherlands, 1880-1920 [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 39 (2014) 1. p.19-47