Hits 1-10 within 20 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
Personalabbau und Ethik: ein historischer Essay zur Frage, ob es richtig war, Kathryn McNeil zu entlassen [journal article]
Source: Zeitschrift für Wirtschafts- und Unternehmensethik, 8 (2007) 3. p.315-327
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
Bilanzen des Alters: oder: Was lehren uns ostfriesische Kirchenbücher über die Evolution von Großmüttern? [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 30 (2005) 3. p.205-218
Deviante Ehevorstellungen und Eheverlaufsformen in radikal-pietistischen Gemeinschaften um 1800: das Fallbeispiel Dietrich und Christine Reckefuß [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 28 (2003) 3. p.174-188
Flood disasters and political culture at the German North Sea coast: a long-term historical perspective [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 32 (2007) 3. p.133-144
Vergangenheit versus Gegenwart? Anmerkungen zu Potentialen, Risiken und Nebenwirkungen einer Kombination historischer und aktueller Ansätze der Naturgefahrenforschung [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 32 (2007) 3. p.215-234
Learning from disasters: Saxony fights the floods of the river Elbe 1784-1845 [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 32 (2007) 3. p.169-199
Heiratsverhalten als historisches Problem [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 28 (2003) 3. p.8-28
Between 'traditional' collectivity and 'modern' individuality: an atomistic perspective on family and household astride the Hajnal Line (Upper Silesia and Great Poland at the end of the 18th century) [journal article]
Source: Historical Social Research, 30 (2005) 3. p.130-170