Citations (9)
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Read on this site (5)
Alice Reid. (2021) Why a long-term perspective is beneficial for demographers. Population Studies 75:sup1, pages 157-177.
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Ridhi Kashyap. (2021) Has demography witnessed a data revolution? Promises and pitfalls of a changing data ecosystem. Population Studies 75:sup1, pages 47-75.
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Carry van Lieshout, Robert J. Bennett & Harry Smith. (2021) The British business census of entrepreneurs and firm-size, 1851–1881: New data for economic and business historians. Historical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History 54:3, pages 129-150.
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Mark Gortfelder, Hannaliis Jaadla & Martin Klesment. (2021) Socio-economic status and fertility in an urban context at the end of the nineteenth century: a linked records study from Tartu, Estonia. The History of the Family 26:1, pages 51-73.
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J. David Hacker. (2020) Reconstruction of birth histories using children ever born and children surviving data from the 1900 and 1910 U.S. censuses. Historical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History 53:1, pages 28-52.
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Articles from other publishers (4)
Alice Reid, Eilidh Garrett, Hannaliis Jaadla, Kevin Schürer & Sarah Rafferty. (2023) Fatal Places? Contextual Effects on Infant and Child Mortality in Early Twentieth Century England and Wales. Social Science History, pages 1-28.
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Dylan Shane Connor. (2021) In the Name of the Father? Fertility, Religion, and Child Naming in the Demographic Transition. Demography 58:5, pages 1793-1815.
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Ian Timaeus. (2021) The Own-Children Method of fertility estimation: The devil is in the detail. Demographic Research 45, pages 825-840.
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Hannaliis Jaadla, Alice Reid, Eilidh Garrett, Kevin Schürer & Joseph Day. (2020) Revisiting the Fertility Transition in England and Wales: The Role of Social Class and Migration. Demography 57:4, pages 1543-1569.
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