| Charles F. Westoff - Social Science - 1992 - 74 pages
This report derives estimates from national sample surveys conducted in Africa over the past dozen years of the trends in age at first marriage and at first birth. By splicing ... | |
| Larry L. Bumpass, Charles F. Westoff - Social Science - 2015 - 185 pages
Why do American couples differ in the number of children they have? To answer this question the first major longitudinal study in American fertility was begun in 1957 with a ... | |
| Charles F. Westoff, Norman B. Ryder - Social Science - 2015 - 398 pages
Here is the full report of the 1970 National Fertility Study, a national sample survey for which thousands of women were interviewed who had been married at some time and were ... | |
| Charles F. Westoff, Raymond H. Potvin - Social Science - 2015 - 258 pages
Has the college experience of women been an influence on the number of children desired and the number and spacing of their children? Do women come to college with their ... | |
| Charles F. Westoff - Social Science - 2015 - 456 pages
This analysis is based upon a study of 1,165 couples, all of whom had two children by the time of the interviews and lived in one of the Standard Metropolitan Areas. Its ... | |
| Charles F. Westoff, R. G. Potter - Social Science - 2015 - 321 pages
The second phase of a long-term study in American fertility. Tables, interview forms. Originally published in 1963. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand ... | |
| Norman B. Ryder, Charles F. Westoff - Social Science - 2017 - 424 pages
The 1965 National Fertility Study is the third in a continuing series of major studies of American fertility. Based on interviews with 5,600 married women under the age of 55 ... | |
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