Tuesday, September 27, 2005

The Second Stage and other references

Miscelaneous References


Brückner, H. & Mayer, K. U. (2005). “De-Standardization of the Life Course: What It Might Mean? And If It Means Anything, Whether it Actually Took Place,” In R. Macmillan (Ed.), The Structure of the Life Course: Standardized? Individualized? Differentiated? (Vol. 9, pp. 27-54). Amsterdam et al.: JAI Elsevier.

Mayer, K. U. (2004). Whose Lives? How History, Societies and Institutions Define and Shape Life Courses. Research in Human Development 1 (3), 161-187.

Mayer, K. U. (2003). The sociology of the life course and lifespan psychology: Diverging or converging pathways? In U. M. Staudinger & U. Lindenberger (Eds.), Understanding human development: Dialogues with lifespan psychology (pp. 463-481). Boston, MA: Kluwer.

Mayer, K. U. 2001. “The paradox of global social change and national path dependencies: Life course patterns in advanced societies”. In.: A. E. Woodward and M. Kohli (eds.) Inclusions and exclusions in European societies. Routledge, London, pp. 89-110.

Mayer, K. U. (2000). Promises fulfilled? A review of 20 years of life course research. Archives Européennes de Sociologie, 41, 259-282.


References II


Blair-Loy, M. (1999). Career patterns of executive women in finance: An optimal
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Bloom, D.E., and J. D. Sachs. (1998)., ”Geography, Demography and Economic Growth in Africa”, Brooking Papers on Economic Activity 1998:2.

Bongaarts, J. (1998) Fertility and Reproductive Preferences in Post-Transitional Societies, Paper prepared for the Conference on Global Fertility Transition, Bellagio, Italy, May 1998.



Bongaarts, J. and R. A. Bulatao (eds.). 2000. Beyond Six Billion: Forecasting the World’s Population. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.

Bongaarts, J. and G. Feeney. 1998. “On the quantum and tempo of fertility,” Population and Development Review 24(2): 271-291.

Bumpass, L. L. and E. K. Mburugu. 1977. “Age at marriage and completed family size,”
Social Biology 24(1): 31-37.

Caldwell, John C. 1982. Theory of Fertility Decline. New York: Academic Press.

N. de Coninck-Smith, B. Sandin and E. Schrumpf (eds.), Industrious
Children. Work and Childhood in the Nordic Countries 1850-1990, Odense, 1997.

Council of Economic Advisors (2000). Economic Report of the President, 2000. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.

H. Cunningham and P. P. Viazzo (eds.), Child Labour in Historical Perspective 1800-1985: Case Studies From Europe, Japan and Colombia, Unicef, 1996;


Demeny, Paul 1997. “Replacement-level fertility: The implausible endpoint of the demographic transition,” in Gavin W. Jones, Robert M. Douglas, John C. Caldwell, and Rennie M. D’Souza (eds.), The Continuing Demographic Transition. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Demeny, Paul 2003. Population Policy: A Concise Summary in Paul Demeny and Geoffrey
McNicoll, editors International Encyclopedia of Population,


Drago, Robert and Amy Varner (2001). Fertility and Work in the United States: A Policy Perspective, Pennsylvania State University, mimeo



Foster, C. 2000. “The limits to low fertility: A biosocial approach,” Population and Development Review 26(2): 209-234.


Frejka, T. and G. Calot. 2001a. “Cohort reproductive patterns in low-fertility countries,” Population and Development Review 27(1): 103-132.

Garey, A.I. (1999). Weaving work and motherhood. Philadelphia, PA: Temple
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Gruber, Jonathan and David A. Wise, eds. 1999. Social Security and Retirement Around the World. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Higgins, M. and J. G. Williamson, (1999) Explaining Inequality the World Round: Cohort Size, Kuznets Curves, and Openness, Federal Reserve Bank of New
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Kohler, H.-P., F. C. Billari, and J. A. Ortega. 2002. “The emergence of lowest-low fertility in Europe during the 1990s”. Population and Development Review 28 (4): 641-680.

Kohler, H.-P. and J. A. Ortega. 2002a. “Tempo-adjusted period parity progression measures, fertility postponement and completed cohort fertility,” Demographic Research [online available at http://www.demographic-research.org] 6(6): 91-144.


Kohler, H.-P., A. Skytthe, and K. Christensen. 2001. “The age at first birth and completed fertility reconsidered: Findings from a sample of identical twins,” Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock, Germany, Working Paper #2001-006 (available at http://www.demogr.mpg.de).

Kuznets, S. (1969) Modern Economic Growth. Rate, Structure and Spread, New Haven and London.


Lesthaeghe, R. 2001. “Postponement and recuperation: Recent fertility trends and
forecasts in six Western European Countries,” paper presented at the IUSSP Seminar
on International Perspectives on Low Fertility: Trends, Theories and Policies,
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Lesthaeghe, R. and P. Willems. 1999. “Is low fertility a temporary phenomenon in the
European Union,” Population and Development Review 25(2): 211-228.


Livi-Bacci, Massimo. (2001). DEMOGRAPHIC SHOCKS: THE VIEW FROM HISTORY

Lutz, W. and S. Scherbov. 2003. “Can immigration compensate for Europe’s low fertility?” European Demographic Research Papers 2003, No. 1, Vienna Institute of Demography.


Lutz, W. and V. Skirbekk. 2004. “How would “tempo policies” work?” Paper presented at the 2004 PAA Annual meeting, Boston, 1-3 April 2004.

Lutz, W., B. C. O’Neill, and S. Scherbov. 2003. “Europe’s population at a turning point”. Science 299: 1991

Lutz, W., W. Sanderson, and S. Scherbov. 2001. “The end of world population growth,”
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Malmberg, Bo & Lena Sommestad. (2000). Four Phases in the Demographic Transition, Implications for Economic and Social Development in Sweden, 1820-2000. Arbetsrapport/Institutet för Framtidsstudier;Working Paper 2000:6




Marini, M. M. and P. J. Hodsdon. 1981. “Effects of the timing of marriage and first birth on the spacing of subsequent births.,” Demography 18(4): 529-548.

Morgan, P. S. and R. B. King. 2001. “Why have children in the 21st century? Biological predispositions, social coercion, rational choice,” European Journal of Population 17(1): 3-20.

Morgan, P. S. and R. R. Rindfuss. 1999. “Reexamining the link of early childbearing to marriage and to subsequent fertility,” Demography 36(1): 59-75.


Rostow, W.W. (1990) The stages of economic growth : a non-communist manifesto, 3. ed., Cambridge.

United Nations Population Division. 2002. World Population Prospects: The 2002 Revision. New York: UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs.

Wilson, C. 2001. “On the scale of global demographic convergence 1950-2000,” Population and Development Review 27(1): 155-172.