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1. La reconstitución de familias en Uruapan, Michoacán, México colonial, 1678-1784.

2. An Overview of the BALSAC Population Database. Past Developments, Current State and Future Prospects

3. Re-introducing the Cambridge Group Family Reconstitutions

4. Population and social structure.

5. The golden age of spinning.

6. The effect of social status on women's age at first childbirth in the late seventeenth- to early eighteenth-century Korea

7. BUILDING LIFE COURSE DATASETS FROM POPULATION REGISTERS BY THE HISTORICAL SAMPLE OF THE NETHERLANDS (HSN).

8. The Programme de recherche en démographie historique: past, present and future developments in family reconstitution

9. Why does paternal death accelerate the transition to first marriage in the C18-C19 Krummhörn population?

10. Family, Stability, and Respectability: Seven Generations of Africans and Afro-descendants in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Minas Gerais

11. Urban Family Reconstitution - a Worked Example

12. The adoption of fertility control on Mykonos, 1879-1959: Stopping, spacing or both?

13. Explaining the rise in marital fertility in England in the `long' eighteenth century.

14. English Population History from Family Reconstitution: Summary Results 1600-1799.

15. The Reliability of Parochial Registration and the Representativeness of Family Reconstitution.

16. Population in History.

17. CHILD DISABLEMENT, FAMILY DISSOLUTION AND RECONSTITUTION

18. Des fiches de famille à la mesure des migrations

19. Fertility in Historical Demography and a Homeostatic Method for Reconstituting Populations in Pre-Statistical Periods

20. Familles montréalaises du XIXe siècle : trois cultures, trois trajectoires

22. Unnatural infertility, or, whatever happened in Colyton? Some reflections on English population history from family reconstitution 1580–1837

23. English population history from family reconstitution 1580–1837. [By] E.A. Wrigley, R.S. Davies, J.E. Oeppen [and] R.S. Schofield. [Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy and Society in Past Time, 32.] Cambridge Univerity Press, Cambridge [etc.] 1997. xxii, 657 pp. £60.00; $85.00

25. Explaining the rise in marital fertility in England in the ‘long’ eighteenth century

26. HOW RELIABLE IS OUR KNOWLEDGE OF THE DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THE ENGLISH POPULATION IN THE EARLY MODERN PERIOD?

27. The estimation of adult mortality

29. Selection criteria used in compiling the tables in chapters 5 to 7

30. INTERACTING FACTORS AFFECTING ILLEGITIMACY IN PREINDUSTRIAL NORTHERN ENGLAND

31. Bias in Age at Marriage in Family Reconstitutions: Evidence from French-Canadian Data

32. Historical Models of the Central European Family: Czech and Slovak Examples

33. Before the transition: fertility in English villages, 1800–1880

34. The Effect of Migration on the Estimation of Marriage Age in Family Reconstitution Studies

35. From weavers to workers: demographic implications of an economic transformation in Twente (the Netherlands) in the nineteenth century

36. 13. Labor Migration In A Pre-Industrial Society: A Study Tracing The Life Histories Of The Inhabitants Of A Village

37. Current Issues and New Prospects for Computerized Record Linkage in the Province of Québec

40. Transformations of reproductive behavior during the fertility transition: a family reconstitution study of a Finnish parish

41. Reconciling cross-sectional and longitudinal measures of fertility, Quebec 1890-1900

42. Correcting missing-data bias in historical demography

43. HISTORICAL AND ETHNOGRAPHIC DEMOGRAPHY

48. Introduction

49. Archival research in physical anthropology

50. Locations for study

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