Recent research argues that discriminatory practices unduly inflated female excess mortality during infancy and childhood in historical Europe. This article reviews the existing evidence by (1) evaluating the sources that can be used to study this phenomenon; (2) providing a state-of-the-art account of the prevalence of these discriminatory practices, as well as the factors that explain them; and (3) outlining a research agenda that could fill in the gaps in the literature
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
This article uncovers the existence of discriminatory practices in pre-industrial Spain by examining...
Until the late 1930s, almost all European countries were characterized by excess female mortality du...
By relying on the number of (surviving) boys per hundred girls observed in the population censuses a...
The relationship between gender and mortality in nineteenth-century Europe has been highly debated. ...
Although recent findings suggest that gender-discriminatory practices unduly increased female mortal...
The relationship between gender and mortality in nineteenth-century Europe has been highly debated. ...
This paper argues that son preference resulted in gender-based discriminatory practices that unduly ...
The inferior status of girls to boys meant that their death rate was higher ; this can be attributed...
Infant and childhood sex ratios in nineteenth‐century Spain were abnormally high, thus pointing to s...
Gender bias against girls in nineteenth-century England has received much interest but establishing ...
The death rate for women was always higher than that for men during the 19th century in Europe. This...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
Relying on longitudinal micro data from rural Spain between 1750 and 1950, this article evidences th...
Background: This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
This article uncovers the existence of discriminatory practices in pre-industrial Spain by examining...
Until the late 1930s, almost all European countries were characterized by excess female mortality du...
By relying on the number of (surviving) boys per hundred girls observed in the population censuses a...
The relationship between gender and mortality in nineteenth-century Europe has been highly debated. ...
Although recent findings suggest that gender-discriminatory practices unduly increased female mortal...
The relationship between gender and mortality in nineteenth-century Europe has been highly debated. ...
This paper argues that son preference resulted in gender-based discriminatory practices that unduly ...
The inferior status of girls to boys meant that their death rate was higher ; this can be attributed...
Infant and childhood sex ratios in nineteenth‐century Spain were abnormally high, thus pointing to s...
Gender bias against girls in nineteenth-century England has received much interest but establishing ...
The death rate for women was always higher than that for men during the 19th century in Europe. This...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
Relying on longitudinal micro data from rural Spain between 1750 and 1950, this article evidences th...
Background: This study examines the claim that social inequality in health in European populations w...
In recent years, a number of historians have examined the reasons for differences in the height and ...
This article uncovers the existence of discriminatory practices in pre-industrial Spain by examining...
Until the late 1930s, almost all European countries were characterized by excess female mortality du...