This article examines religion, birthplace and occupational status as they relate to changes in fertility in Kingston, Ontario between 1861 and 1881. The specific focus is on marital fertility which, in contrast to the European experience, was the dominant component of the demographic transition in Canada. The paper has three main objectives: to demonstrate the utility of the manuscript censuses as a micro-level database for studying complex social demographic effects on fertility; to identify the basic components of change in marital fertility for Kingston in 1861-1881; and, to determine the relative contributions of religion, birthplace and occupational status to age-specific marital fertility rates. Cet article a pour but d’examiner les...
The analysis of fertility decline and its socioeconomic and cultural determinants during the demogra...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
Poster Presentation The historical demographic literature on marriage has devoted a great deal of at...
Anglophone Canada, Ontario especially, was in the forefront of the world fertility decline. The limi...
This research is concerned with reconstructing and analyzing the history of fertility transition in ...
This article attempts to understand linkages between structural economic change and patterns of fami...
There are similarities and differences in marriage and fertility behavior between early North Americ...
The last two centuries have seen dramatic shifts in labor and demography: a precipitous drop in fert...
The timings of historical fertility transitions in different regions are well understood by demograp...
This study focuses on the decline of marital fertility between 1851 and 1891 in the French departmen...
Journal ArticleCanada is in an advantageous position to study the social context of human reproducti...
This short article documents the restriction of births in a rural protestant society which is virtua...
Background: Historically, the French Canadian population of Quebec, Canada, is known for its high fe...
In this paper we first set out to evaluate how much the fertility between Rostock as an urban settle...
Making use of the reconstituted families of the BALSAC population register, the author has studied t...
The analysis of fertility decline and its socioeconomic and cultural determinants during the demogra...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
Poster Presentation The historical demographic literature on marriage has devoted a great deal of at...
Anglophone Canada, Ontario especially, was in the forefront of the world fertility decline. The limi...
This research is concerned with reconstructing and analyzing the history of fertility transition in ...
This article attempts to understand linkages between structural economic change and patterns of fami...
There are similarities and differences in marriage and fertility behavior between early North Americ...
The last two centuries have seen dramatic shifts in labor and demography: a precipitous drop in fert...
The timings of historical fertility transitions in different regions are well understood by demograp...
This study focuses on the decline of marital fertility between 1851 and 1891 in the French departmen...
Journal ArticleCanada is in an advantageous position to study the social context of human reproducti...
This short article documents the restriction of births in a rural protestant society which is virtua...
Background: Historically, the French Canadian population of Quebec, Canada, is known for its high fe...
In this paper we first set out to evaluate how much the fertility between Rostock as an urban settle...
Making use of the reconstituted families of the BALSAC population register, the author has studied t...
The analysis of fertility decline and its socioeconomic and cultural determinants during the demogra...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
Poster Presentation The historical demographic literature on marriage has devoted a great deal of at...