Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Population studies, 2003 - Taylor & Francis
Near‐global fertility decline began in the 1960s, and from the 1980s an increasing number
of European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below …
of European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below …
Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities.
JC Caldwell, T Schindimayr - Population Studies, 2003 - search.ebscohost.com
Near-global fertility decline began in the 1960s, and from the 1980s an increasing number of
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
[PDF][PDF] Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Population Studies, 2003 - scholar.archive.org
Near-global fertility decline began in the 1960s, and from the 1980s an increasing number of
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: a search for commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Population studies, 2003 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Near-global fertility decline began in the 1960s, and from the 1980s an increasing number of
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
[PDF][PDF] Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Population Studies, 2003 - ereserve.library.utah.edu
Near-global fertility decline began in the 1960s, and from the 1980s an increasing number of
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities
J Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Population Studies, 2003 - ingentaconnect.com
Near-global fertility decline began in the 1960s, and from the 1980s an increasing number of
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
[引用][C] Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Population Studies, 2003 - cir.nii.ac.jp
Explanations of the Fertility Crisis in Modern Societies: A Search for Commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Population Studies, 2003 - JSTOR
Near-global fertility decline began in the 1960s, and from the 1980s an increasing number of
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
European countries and some Asian ones achieved very low fertility (total fertility below 1.5) …
Explanations of the Fertility Crisis in Modern Societies: a Search for Commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - Demographic Transition Theory, 2006 - Springer
Fertility declined in most of the industrialized world from the late nineteenth century until the
1930s when much ofWestern Europe recorded, for the first time in history, total fertility below …
1930s when much ofWestern Europe recorded, for the first time in history, total fertility below …
Explanations of the fertility crisis in modern societies: A search for commonalities
JC Caldwell, T Schindlmayr - JSTOR
1 Continuing means the period, no matter how short, that encompasses the time spent up to
and including 2002 with the annual total fertility not exceeding 1.5. Total fertility for 2002 …
and including 2002 with the annual total fertility not exceeding 1.5. Total fertility for 2002 …