Contains fulltext : 102430.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Prior research has suggested that the quality of maternal care given to infants and small children plays an important role in the strong clustering of children's deaths. In this article, we investigate the quality of maternal care provided by those women who most nineteenth-century social commentators declared would never make good housewives or mothers: the young girls and women working in textile mills. We carried out this examination using an analysis of children's mortality risks in two textile cities in The Netherlands between roughly 1900 and 1930. Our analysis suggests that these children's clustered mortality risks cannot have resulted from either...
The death rate for women was always higher than that for men during the 19th century in Europe. This...
Early in the twentieth century, states and courts began limiting the workplace hours of wage-earning...
markdownabstractUsing family reconstitution data from the Dutch provinces of Groningen, Drenthe, and...
Prior research has suggested that the quality of maternal care given to infants and small children p...
This book sets out to prove that nineteenth-century working class women were not always bad mothers....
Contains fulltext : 200259pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In this arti...
Extract from: Infant Mortality and Working-Class Child Care, 1850-1899 unlocks the hidden history of...
The progress of industrialization throughout the nineteenth century had profound effects on health a...
This article addresses the question whether maternal mortality should be excluded from the study of ...
This article addresses the question whether maternal mortality should be excluded from the study of ...
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: At both ends of the female reproductive span, the risk of ...
While women today often face a substantial wage penalty for childbearing, we show that this was not ...
During the first half of the nineteenth century infant mortality rates in Ådalen, an agrarian region...
Contains fulltext : 133588.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The way small i...
A survey of government reports and the archives and journals of other agencies interested in industr...
The death rate for women was always higher than that for men during the 19th century in Europe. This...
Early in the twentieth century, states and courts began limiting the workplace hours of wage-earning...
markdownabstractUsing family reconstitution data from the Dutch provinces of Groningen, Drenthe, and...
Prior research has suggested that the quality of maternal care given to infants and small children p...
This book sets out to prove that nineteenth-century working class women were not always bad mothers....
Contains fulltext : 200259pub.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)In this arti...
Extract from: Infant Mortality and Working-Class Child Care, 1850-1899 unlocks the hidden history of...
The progress of industrialization throughout the nineteenth century had profound effects on health a...
This article addresses the question whether maternal mortality should be excluded from the study of ...
This article addresses the question whether maternal mortality should be excluded from the study of ...
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: At both ends of the female reproductive span, the risk of ...
While women today often face a substantial wage penalty for childbearing, we show that this was not ...
During the first half of the nineteenth century infant mortality rates in Ådalen, an agrarian region...
Contains fulltext : 133588.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The way small i...
A survey of government reports and the archives and journals of other agencies interested in industr...
The death rate for women was always higher than that for men during the 19th century in Europe. This...
Early in the twentieth century, states and courts began limiting the workplace hours of wage-earning...
markdownabstractUsing family reconstitution data from the Dutch provinces of Groningen, Drenthe, and...