Search results for "Historical demography"

showing 4 items of 4 documents

The main trends in the palaeodemography of the 7th-18th century population of Latvia

2006

The study represents palaeodemographic research of osteological material of 3304 individuals from the funds of the Anthropological Laboratory of the Institute of History of the University of Latvia in Riga, dating from the 7 th to the 18 th century AD. Compensated life expectancy at birth is varying between 20.3 and 22.2 years during the research period. Crude mortality has changed between 49.3 and 45 %o. In the early period (7 th - 13 th century) there is a significant male prevalence (2.2 - 1.4); female life expectancy at the age of 20 is on average 6.6 years less than for males. This difference decreases to 5.4 years in the 13 th - 18 th century. According to historical demography, femal…

AdultMaleHistoryAdolescentPopulation DynamicsPopulationDemographic transitionReproductive ageHistory 18th CenturyHistory 17th CenturyAge DistributionLife ExpectancyBody SizeHumansMortalitySex DistributionBirth RateChildeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDemographyHistory 15th CenturyFamily Characteristicseducation.field_of_studyLife spanInfant NewbornInfantPaleontologyHistorical demographyGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedLatviaHistory MedievalChild mortalityHistory 16th CenturyFemale life expectancyChild PreschoolAnthropologyLife expectancyFemaleAnimal Science and ZoologyDemographyAnthropologischer Anzeiger
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A changing Sicily: Homage to Jane and Peter Schneider

2006

The research that Jane and Peter Schneider carried out in Sicily, in the little Agrigentine town of Villamaura in the 1970s and later in the area of Palermo until 2000, made an important contribution to the work of social scientists who have chosen Sicily as a site from which to contribute to the debates on the Mafia, codes of honor, reproductive behavior, and the relationship between modernity and backwardness and between society and culture. These studies bring together perspectives that draw on both the anthropology of Mediterranean societies and on historical demography in ways that have developed new and innovative research paradigms and methodologies, and have opened up new fields of …

Cultural StudiesHistorySociology and Political ScienceAnthropologyModernitymedia_common.quotation_subjectReproductive behaviorReproductive behaviorHistorical demographyGender studiesHuman sexualityBackwardnesslanguage.human_languageSexual behaviorHonorPolitical Science and International RelationslanguageFamilySociologyHonor/shameSicilianSexualityHistory of the Mafiamedia_common
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More than a leap of faith: the impact of biological and religious correlates on reproductive behavior.

2004

Using a conceptual model that integrates both social and biomedical factors of causation, this paper tries to delineate the pathways through which the reproductive characteristics of a multidenominational community are characterized. In total, 5513 historical entries from family reconstitution were available. Selection of data was guided by the inclusion of information about religious affiliation. Only married couples with children as well as single mothers with the relevant information were considered. Of these, 1855 entries were of Roman Catholic (C), 1143 of Lutheran/Protestant (L/P2), and 609 of Reformed Calvinist (R) denomination. The analysis documented differential nuptiality and fer…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectFertilityReproductive BehaviorHistory 18th CenturyLeap of faithBiological FactorsProtestantismSociologyGermanyGeneticsHumansFamilySociologyCausationMarriageSociocultural evolutionGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonHistorical demographyHistorical ArticleHistory 19th CenturySingle mothersHistory 20th CenturyModels TheoreticalReligionParitySocioeconomic FactorsFemaleSeasonsSocial psychologyMaternal AgeHuman biology
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God, Faith, and Death: The Impact of Biological and Religious Correlates on Mortality

2004

Marked denominational mortality differentials have been documented for various time periods and geographic locations. From a historical perspective, death rates among Catholics are often found to be higher than those among Protestants or Jews. Using a conceptual model based on the life history approach, biomedical and sociocultural factors of causation are extrapolated. In total, 5513 historical entries from family reconstitution were available. Selection of data was guided by the inclusion of information about religious affiliation. Only married couples with children as well as single mothers were considered. Of these, 1855 entries were of Roman Catholic (C), 1143 of Lutheran/Protestant (L…

AdultMalemedia_common.quotation_subjectLongevityReligiosityFaithSex FactorsProtestantismPregnancyRisk FactorsGermanyInfant MortalityGeneticsHumansSociologyMortalityCausationChildSociocultural evolutionGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonMortality rateCatholicismInfant NewbornPregnancy OutcomeHistorical demographySingle mothersSurvival AnalysishumanitiesPedigreeParityMaternal MortalityProtestantismSocioeconomic FactorsFemaleDemographyHuman Biology
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