227 results on '"Kulu, hill"'
Search Results
202. Generations of immigrants in Estonian labour market in 2000
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Tammur, Alis, Tammaru, Tiit, juhendaja, Kulu, Hill, juhendaja, Tartu Ülikool. Bioloogia-geograafiateaduskond, and Tartu Ülikool. Geograafia instituut
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põlvkondadevahelised erinevused ,eneseteostus ,tööjõu mobiilsus ,kultuurierinevused ,tööturg ,toimetulek ,sotsiaalne tõrjutus ,sotsiaalne integratsioon ,immigratsioon ,Eesti ,regionaalsed erinevused ,magistritööd ,etniline koosseis ,sotsiaalne staatus ,cultural difference ,immigration - Published
- 2006
203. Late socialist segregation of Kohtla-Järve;Поздне-социалистическая сегрегация в Кохтла-Ярве
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Valge, Janek, Kulu, Hill, juhendaja, Tammaru, Tiit, juhendaja, Tartu Ülikool. Bioloogia-geograafiateaduskond, and Tartu Ülikool. Geograafia instituut
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linnageograafia ,urban geography ,sotsialistlik ühiskond ,inimgeograafia ,eluase ,sotsiaalne struktuur ,Kohtla-Järve ,magistritööd ,elamistingimused ,asustus ,segregatsioon ,sotsiaalsed kihid - Published
- 2006
204. Understanding health inequalities in multimorbidity and functional limitation of the ageing population in England
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Singer, Leo, Green, Mark, Rowe, Francisco, Ben-Shlomo, Yoav, Morrissey, Karyn, and Kulu, Hill
- Abstract
The thesis explored the social and life course factors behind the prevalence and risk of multimorbidity and functional limitation as well as their unequal distribution in the ageing population of England. Multimorbidity is the co-occurrence of two or more diseases within a person. Functional limitations are restrictions in performing fundamental physical and mental actions used in daily life. The thesis identified previously unmeasured inequality in the population with multimorbidity and functional limitation. People aged 50-54 years with the least household wealth had the same prevalence of complex multimorbidity as those 20 years older in the most affluent category and the prevalence of functional limitations comparable to those 30 years older in the top wealth group. Further analysis included a range of material, psychosocial and behavioural determinants into the analysis. Household wealth, sense of control over personal life, physical activity and loneliness were associated with the risk of multimorbidity and functional limitation. Finally, the thesis developed a pathway model of how childhood circumstances – social class, adverse experiences and health – affect the risk of multimorbidity and functional limitation in old age. The material, psychosocial and behavioural pathways acted as magnifiers of inequalities from the early life period.
205. Population Growth, Internal Migration and Urbanisation in Malaysia: Recent and Future trends, 1980 – 2040
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Bin Danial, Muhammad Hakim, Williamson, Paul, Arribas-Bel, Daniel, and Kulu, Hill
206. Transition to adulthood in England and Wales: The analysis of life trajectories of young adults
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Pelikh, A, Williamson, Paul, Kulu, hill, and Rowe, francisco
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This thesis investigates various life trajectories of young people in England and Wales during the transition to adulthood. This thesis moves beyond one-event transitions and investigates education and employment, partnership, and residential careers from a longitudinal perspective. This thesis investigates how the trajectories are influenced by birth cohort, parental socio-economic background, and individual’s life course characteristics. This thesis investigates the cohorts born between 1974 and 1991 who experienced their transition to adulthood since the beginning of the 1990s. Overall, the longitudinal analysis of 5-year birth cohorts highlighted significant changes in life course trajectories over the last 25 years, while some continuity was observed as well. This thesis presents evidence towards “protracted” youth transitions with further postponement of leaving the parental home and first partnership formation, which can be partially explained by the expansion of further and higher education. Overall, the analysis suggests that together with the postponement, life course trajectories among the youngest cohorts have become more complex with a higher number of events occuring in all life domains (e.g. higher rates of moving and higher rates of separation from first cohabiting unions). Overall, the findings suggest that there is a trend towards a convergence in trajectories between men and women, although persistent inequalities are observed in labour market outcomes. Findings of this thesis provide evidence that parental socio-economic background which has traditionally played an important role in shaping young people's life course trajectories in Britain still explains a large part of the variation in transitions. Young people from more advantaged backgrounds are more likely to obtain high qualifications and profit from higher returns to longer time spent in education. Despite an increase in the proportion of young people from less advantaged backgrounds going into higher education, they are still much less likely to occupy professional and managerial positions. In contrast to previous arguments, parental socio-economic background was found to play little role in partnership transitions among the cohorts studied in this thesis.
207. Family Formation and Employment Changes Among Descendants of Immigrants in France: A Multiprocess Analysis.
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Delaporte I and Kulu H
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This paper investigates the association between family formation and the labour market trajectories of immigrants' descendants over the life course. Using rich data from the Trajectories and Origins survey from France, we apply multilevel event history models to analyse the transitions in and out of employment for both men and women by parity. We account for unobserved co-determinants of childbearing and employment by applying a simultaneous-equations modelling. Our analysis shows that women's professional careers are negatively associated with childbirth. There are differences across descendant groups. The female descendants of Turkish immigrants are more likely to exit employment and less likely to re-enter employment following childbirth than women from other groups. The negative impact of childbearing on employment is slightly overestimated among women due to unobserved selection effects. Among men, the descendants of European immigrants are less likely to exit employment after having a child than other descendant groups. The study demonstrates the negative effect of childbearing on women's employment, which is pronounced for some minority groups suggesting the need for further policies to help women reconcile work with family life., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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208. Family trajectories among immigrants and their descendants in three European countries: A multistate approach in comparative research.
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Kulu H, Mikolai J, Delaporte I, Liu C, and Andersson G
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This study investigates partnership changes and childbearing among immigrants and their descendants in the UK, France, and Germany. Our analysis of longitudinal data shows, first, significant diversity in family trajectories among immigrants and their descendants in Europe. Immigrants from other European countries and their descendants tend to cohabit prior to marriage, and their fertility in unions is often similar to that of the native population. In contrast, South Asians and Turkish populations exhibit marriage-centred family behaviour with elevated third-birth rates. Individuals of sub-Saharan African or Caribbean origin display higher rates of non-marital family transitions. Second, we observe some changes in partnership and childbearing patterns across migrant generations; these are stronger for fertility than for partnership patterns. Third, migration background is particularly associated with partnership patterns, whereas the destination country context influences childbearing patterns. We expect some patterns to persist across future migrant generations (e.g. preference for marriage vs cohabitation), whereas others are likely to vanish (e.g. large families).
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- 2024
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209. On the Timing of Marriage and Childbearing: Family Formation Pathways Among Immigrants in Switzerland.
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Lacroix J, Mikolai J, and Kulu H
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This paper examines childbearing in and outside of marriage as a manifestation of the Second Demographic Transition among immigrant populations in Switzerland. Based on full-population register data, we simultaneously analyse fertility and partnership changes at different stages of the migration process. Results from a multistate event history model show that most of the differences in family formation patterns between migrant groups and natives are in the sequencing of marriage and first birth among childless unmarried women. Out of wedlock family trajectories prove to be a common experience for European migrants, but a sustainable family pathway only among natives, as well as among immigrants from France, and Sub-Saharan Africa. Among married women, it is the risk of a third birth that marks the differences between groups; first and second birth rates are relatively similar across migrant groups. Distinguishing between the transition patterns of newly arrived immigrants and settled immigrants (characterised by various residence durations) support the disruption hypothesis among EU migrants and the interrelated life events hypothesis among non-EU groups. Family size and the partnership context of fertility highlight which family regime prevails in different population subgroups and the role that immigrants play in the Second Demographic Transition and family transformation in Europe., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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210. Partnership Status, Health, and Mortality: Selection or Protection?
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Kulu H, Mikolai J, and Franke S
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- Humans, Marital Status, Longitudinal Studies, Health Status, Marriage, Family Characteristics
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Married individuals have better health and lower mortality than nonmarried people. Studies show that when cohabitants are distinguished from other nonmarried groups, health differences between partnered and nonpartnered individuals become even more pronounced. Some researchers have argued that partnered individuals have better health and lower mortality because a partnership offers protective effects (protection); others have posited that partnered people have better health and lower mortality because healthy persons are more likely to form a union and less likely to dissolve it (selection). This study contributes to this debate by investigating health and mortality by partnership status in England and Wales and analyzing the causes of mortality differences. We use combined data from the British Household Panel Survey and the UK Household Longitudinal Study and apply a simultaneous-equations hazard model to control for observed and unobserved selection into partnerships. We develop a novel approach to identify frailty based on self-rated health. Our analysis shows that partnered individuals have significantly lower mortality than nonpartnered people. We observe some selection into and out of unions on unobserved health characteristics, but the mortality differences by partnership status persist. The study offers strong support for the marital protection hypothesis and extends it to nonmarital partnerships., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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211. Partnership and fertility trajectories of immigrants and descendants in the United Kingdom: A multilevel multistate event history approach.
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Mikolai J and Kulu H
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- Child, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, United Kingdom, Marriage, Birth Rate, Fertility, Emigrants and Immigrants
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We study the interrelationships between partnership and fertility trajectories of immigrant women and female descendants of immigrants using the UK Household Longitudinal Study. We propose a novel multistate event history approach to analyse the outcomes of unpartnered, cohabiting, and married women. We find that the partnership and fertility behaviours of immigrants and descendants from European and Western countries are similar to those of native women: many cohabit first and then have children and/or marry. Those from countries with conservative family behaviours (e.g. South Asian countries) marry first and then have children. Women from the Caribbean show the weakest link between partnership changes and fertility: some have births outside unions; some form a union and have children thereafter. Family patterns have remained relatively stable across migrant generations and birth cohorts, although marriage is being postponed in all groups. Our findings on immigrants support the socialization hypothesis, whereas those on descendants are in line with the minority subculture hypothesis.
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- 2023
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212. A Longitudinal Analysis of the Association Between Long-Term Exposure to Air Pollution and Cognitive Function Among Adults Aged 45 and Older in China.
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Hu K, Hale JM, Kulu H, Liu Y, and Keenan K
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- Humans, Aged, Longitudinal Studies, Environmental Exposure analysis, Particulate Matter analysis, China epidemiology, Cognition, Air Pollutants analysis, Air Pollution analysis
- Abstract
Objectives: Evidence suggests long-term exposure to fine particulate matter air pollution (PM2.5) is associated with a higher risk of cognitive impairment, especially among older adults. This study examines the relationship between PM2.5 exposure and cognitive function in China's aging population., Methods: We used longitudinal data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (2011-2015) linked with historical PM2.5 concentrations (2000-2015) from remotely sensed satellite data. Growth curve models were applied to estimate associations between PM2.5 exposure (measured in intensity, duration, and a joint variable of intensity with duration for cumulative exposure) and cognitive function., Results: Relative to the lowest exposure group, exposure in the second group of PM2.5 intensity (35-50 μg/m3) is associated with poorer cognitive function, but higher levels of PM2.5 appear to be associated with better cognitive function, indicating a U-shaped association. Similar patterns are seen for fully adjusted models of PM2.5 duration: the second group (13-60 months) is associated with worse cognitive function than the first group (0-12 months), but coefficients are nonsignificant in longer duration groups. Joint analysis of PM2.5 intensity with duration suggests that duration may play a more detrimental role in cognitive function than intensity. However, we do not find a statistically significant association between PM2.5 exposure and the rate of cognitive decline., Discussion: Our findings are mixed and suggest that some categories of higher and longer exposure to PM2.5 are associated with poorer cognitive function, while that exposures do not hasten cognitive decline. However, more work is necessary to disentangle PM2.5 exposure from individuals' background characteristics, particularly those jointly associated with cognitive function and urban living., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America.)
- Published
- 2023
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213. Interaction between childbearing and partnership trajectories among immigrants and their descendants in France: An application of multichannel sequence analysis.
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Delaporte I and Kulu H
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- Humans, France, Social Group, Fertility, Emigrants and Immigrants, Transients and Migrants
- Abstract
While there is a large literature investigating migrant marriage or fertility, little research has examined how childbearing and partnerships are interrelated. In this paper, we investigate how childbearing and partnership trajectories evolve and interact over the life course for immigrants and their descendants and how the relationship varies by migrant origin. We apply multichannel sequence analysis to rich longitudinal survey data from France and find significant differences in family-related behaviour between immigrants, their descendants, and the native French. Immigrants' family behaviour is characterized by stronger association between marriage and childbearing than in the native population. However, there are significant differences across migrant groups. Turkish immigrants exhibit the most conservative family pathways. By contrast, the family behaviour of European immigrants is similar to that of the native population. The study also demonstrates that the family behaviour of some descendant groups has gradually become indistinguishable from that of the native French, whereas for other groups significant differences in family behaviour persist. Supplementary material for this article is available at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00324728.2022.2049856 .
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- 2023
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214. A longitudinal analysis of PM2.5 exposure and multimorbidity clusters and accumulation among adults aged 45-85 in China.
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Hu K, Keenan K, Hale JM, Liu Y, and Kulu H
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While previous studies have emphasised the role of individual factors in understanding multimorbidity disparities, few have investigated contextual factors such as air pollution (AP). We first use cross-sectional latent class analysis (LCA) to assess the associations between PM2.5 exposure and multimorbidity disease clusters, and then estimate the associations between PM2.5 exposure and the development of multimorbidity longitudinally using growth curve modelling (GCM) among adults aged 45-85 in China. The results of LCA modelling suggest four latent classes representing three multimorbidity patterns (respiratory, musculoskeletal, cardio-metabolic) and one healthy pattern. The analysis shows that a 1 μg/m3 increase in cumulative exposure to PM2.5 is associated with a higher likelihood of belonging to respiratory, musculoskeletal or cardio-metabolic clusters: 2.4% (95% CI: 1.02, 1.03), 1.5% (95% CI: 1.01, 1.02) and 3.3% (95% CI: 1.03, 1.04), respectively. The GCM models show that there is a u-shaped association between PM2.5 exposure and multimorbidity, indicating that both lower and higher PM2.5 exposure is associated with increased multimorbidity levels. Higher multimorbidity in areas of low AP is explained by clustering of musculoskeletal diseases, whereas higher AP is associated with cardio-metabolic disease clusters. The study shows how multimorbidity clusters vary contextually and that PM2.5 exposure is more detrimental to health among older adults., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2022 Hu et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2022
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215. Make up or break up? Partnership transitions among young adults in England and Wales.
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Pelikh A, Mikolai J, and Kulu H
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- Male, Humans, Female, Young Adult, Adolescent, Adult, Longitudinal Studies, Wales, England, Marriage, Family Characteristics
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This study investigates partnership transitions of young adults born between 1974 and 1990 in England and Wales. These cohorts were affected by the expansion of higher education, increasing gender equality, and ideational changes, but faced increased economic precarity caused by the economic and housing crisis. Given these changes, it is likely that the partnership experiences of young adults including marriage, cohabitation, separation, and repartnering have also undergone considerable changes. We apply competing risks event history analysis to combined data from the British Household Panel Survey and the UK Household Longitudinal Study to determine how birth cohort, gender, socio-economic background, and educational attainment influence partnership changes. We study the transition into and out of first cohabitation and marriage and repartnering between age 16 and 27. Cohabitation has become a universal form of first union among young adults born in the late 1970s and 1980s regardless of their socio-economic background or educational level, but their first unions do not last long. While cohabiters are equally likely to marry or separate in the oldest cohort (1974-1979), cohabiting unions are very likely to end in separation among the two youngest cohorts (1980-1984 and 1985-1990). Consequently, repartnering has become common; those in the youngest cohort repartner rather quickly suggesting that an increasing number of individuals experience multiple partnerships. Highly educated young adults have higher rates of entry into first cohabitation than their lower educated counterparts across all cohorts. However, we do not find differences in cohabitation outcomes by socio-economic background and educational level indicating that the main changes have taken place across birth cohorts. The results also suggest that there is a convergence in partnership experiences among young men and women. The increased prevalence of sliding into and out of cohabitation could indicate significant changes in the meaning young people attach to first partnerships., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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216. Mixed marriage among immigrants and their descendants in the United Kingdom: Analysis of longitudinal data with missing information.
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Kulu H and Hannemann T
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- Adolescent, Adult, Caribbean Region ethnology, Europe ethnology, Female, Humans, India ethnology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Marriage ethnology, Pakistan ethnology, United Kingdom, Young Adult, Emigrants and Immigrants statistics & numerical data, Ethnicity statistics & numerical data, Marriage statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This study investigates the formation of endogamous and exogamous marriages among immigrants and their descendants in the United Kingdom. We apply event history analysis to data from the Understanding Society study and use multiple imputation to determine the type of marriage for individuals with missing information on the origin of their spouse. The analysis shows, first, significant differences among immigrants and their descendants in the likelihood of marrying within and outside their ethnic groups. While immigrants from European countries have relatively high exogamous marriage rates, South Asians exhibit a high likelihood of marrying a partner from their own ethnic group; Caribbean people hold an intermediate position. Second, the descendants of immigrants have lower endogamous and higher exogamous marriage rates than their parents; however, for some ethnic groups, particularly South Asians, the differences across generations are small, suggesting that changes in marriage patterns have been slower than expected.
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- 2019
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217. Is spatial mobility on the rise or in decline? An order-specific analysis of the migration of young adults in Sweden.
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Kulu H, Lundholm E, and Malmberg G
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Models, Theoretical, Socioeconomic Factors, Sweden, Young Adult, Educational Status, Family Characteristics, Population Dynamics trends, Residence Characteristics statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
The aim of this study is to investigate spatial mobility over time. Research on 'new mobilities' suggests increasing movement of individuals, technology, and information. By contrast, studies of internal migration report declining spatial mobility in recent decades. Using longitudinal register data from Sweden, we calculate annual order-specific migration rates to investigate the spatial mobility of young adults over the last three decades. We standardize mobility rates for educational enrolment, educational level, family status, and place of residence to determine how much changes in individuals' life domains explain changes in mobility. Young adults' migration rates increased significantly in the 1990s; although all order-specific migration rates increased, first migration rates increased the most. Changes in population composition, particularly increased enrolment in higher education, accounted for much of the elevated spatial mobility in the 1990s. The analysis supports neither ever increasing mobility nor a long-term rise in rootedness among young adults in Sweden.
- Published
- 2018
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218. Cause-specific mortality by partnership status: simultaneous analysis using longitudinal data from England and Wales.
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Franke S and Kulu H
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- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Algorithms, England, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Marital Status, Middle Aged, Wales, Cause of Death, Spouses
- Abstract
Background: This paper examines cause-specific mortality by partnership status. Although non-marital cohabitation has spread rapidly in industrialised countries, only a few studies have investigated mortality by partnership status and no recent study has investigated cause-specific mortality by partnership status., Methods: We use data from the Office for National Statistics Longitudinal Study and apply competing risks survival models., Results: The simultaneous analysis shows that married individuals have lower mortality than non-married from circulatory, respiratory, digestive, alcohol and accident related causes of deaths, but not from cancer. The analysis by partnership status reveals that once we distinguish premarital and postmarital cohabitants from other non-married groups, the differences between partnered and non-partnered individuals become even more pronounced for all causes of death; this is largely due to similar cause-specific mortality levels between married and cohabiting individuals., Conclusions: With declining marriage rates and the spread of cohabitation and separation, a distinction between partnered and non-partnered individuals is critical to understanding whether and how having a partner shapes the individuals' health behaviour and mortality. The cause-specific analysis supports both the importance of selection into partnership and the protective effect of living with someone together., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.)
- Published
- 2018
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219. Short- and long-term effects of divorce and separation on housing tenure in England and Wales.
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Mikolai J and Kulu H
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- Adolescent, Adult, England, Family Characteristics, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Wales, Young Adult, Housing statistics & numerical data, Marital Status statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This paper investigates the effects of marital and non-marital separation on individuals' housing tenure in England and Wales. We apply competing risks event history models to data from the British Household Panel Survey and the UK Household Longitudinal Study to analyse the risk of a residential move to different tenure types, for single, married, cohabiting, and separated men and women. Separated individuals are more likely to move and experience a tenure change than those who are single or in a relationship. Among separated people, private renting is the most common outcome of a move; however, women are also likely to move to social renting, whereas men tend to move to homeownership. This pattern persists when we account for time since separation and order of move, indicating a potential long-term effect of separation on housing tenure. This long-term effect is especially pertinent to separated women who cannot afford homeownership.
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- 2018
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220. Divorce, Separation, and Housing Changes: A Multiprocess Analysis of Longitudinal Data from England and Wales.
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Mikolai J and Kulu H
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- Adolescent, Adult, England, Family Characteristics, Female, Humans, Male, Marital Status statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Time Factors, Wales, Young Adult, Divorce statistics & numerical data, Housing statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This study investigates the effect of marital and nonmarital separation on individuals' residential and housing trajectories. Using rich data from the British Household Panel Survey (BHPS) and applying multilevel competing-risks event history models, we analyze the risk of a move of single, married, cohabiting, and separated men and women to different housing types. We distinguish moves due to separation from moves of separated people and account for unobserved codeterminants of moving and separation risks. Our analysis shows that many individuals move due to separation, as expected, but that the likelihood of moving is also relatively high among separated individuals. We find that separation has a long-term effect on individuals' residential careers. Separated women exhibit high moving risks regardless of whether they moved out of the joint home upon separation, whereas separated men who did not move out upon separation are less likely to move. Interestingly, separated women are most likely to move to terraced houses, whereas separated men are equally likely to move to flats (apartments) and terraced (row) houses, suggesting that family structure shapes moving patterns of separated individuals.
- Published
- 2018
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221. Mortality Differences by Partnership Status in England and Wales: The Effect of Living Arrangements or Health Selection?
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Franke S and Kulu H
- Abstract
This article investigates the relationship between partnership status and mortality in England and Wales. Using data from the Office for National Statistics Longitudinal Study for the period between 2001 and 2011, we examine whether married people have lower mortality levels than unmarried individuals; whether individuals who cohabit have mortality levels similar to those of married or single persons; and how much the fact that married couples live with someone rather than alone explains their low mortality. Our analysis shows first that married individuals have lower mortality than unmarried persons. Second, men and women in premarital unions exhibit mortality levels similar to those of married men and women, whereas mortality levels are elevated for post-marital cohabitants. Third, controlling for household size and the presence of children reduces mortality differences between married and unmarried non-partnered individuals, but significant differences persist. The study supports both protection and selection theory. The increase in mortality differences by age between never-married cohabitants and married couples is likely a sign of the long-term accumulation of health and wealth benefits of marriage. Similar mortality levels of cohabiting and married couples at younger ages suggest that healthier individuals are more likely to find a partner.
- Published
- 2017
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222. Mortality among immigrants in England and Wales by major causes of death, 1971-2012: A longitudinal analysis of register-based data.
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Wallace M and Kulu H
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- Adult, England ethnology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Survival Analysis, Wales ethnology, Cause of Death, Emigrants and Immigrants statistics & numerical data, Mortality ethnology
- Abstract
Recent research has found a migrant mortality advantage among immigrants relative to the UK-born population living in England and Wales. However, while all-cause mortality is useful to show differences in mortality between immigrants and the host population, it can mask variation in mortality patterns from specific causes of death. This study analyses differences in the causes of death among immigrants living in England and Wales. We extend previous research by applying competing-risks survival analysis to study a large-scale longitudinal dataset from 1971 to 2012 to directly compare causes of death. We confirm low all-cause mortality among nearly all immigrants, except immigrants from Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland (who have high mortality). In most cases, low all-cause mortality among immigrants is driven by lower mortality from chronic diseases (in nearly all cases by lower cancer mortality and in some cases by lower mortality from cardiovascular diseases (CVD)). This low all-cause mortality often coexists with low respiratory disease mortality and among non-western immigrants, coexists with high mortality from infectious diseases; however, these two causes of death contribute little to mortality among immigrants. For men, CVD is the leading cause of death (particularly among South Asians). For women, cancer is the leading cause of death (except among South Asians, for whom CVD is also the leading cause). Differences in CVD mortality over time remain constant between immigrants relative to UK-born, but immigrant cancer patterns shows signs of some convergence to the cancer mortality among the UK-born (though cancer mortality is still low among immigrants by age 80). The study provides the most up-to-date, reliable UK-based analysis of immigrant mortality., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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223. Low immigrant mortality in England and Wales: a data artefact?
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Wallace M and Kulu H
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- Adult, Aged, England epidemiology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Sex Factors, Statistics as Topic, Survival Analysis, Wales epidemiology, Young Adult, Emigrants and Immigrants statistics & numerical data, Mortality ethnology
- Abstract
Previous research shows low mortality for most immigrants compared to natives in host countries. This advantage is often attributed to health selection processes in migration and to protective health behaviours. Little research has examined the role of data quality, especially the registration of moves. Registration errors relating to moves between origin and host countries can mismatch deaths and risk populations, leading to denominator bias and an under-estimation of migrant mortality (data artefact). The paper investigates the mortality of immigrants in England and Wales from 1971 to 2001 using the Office for National Statistics Longitudinal Study (ONS LS), a 1% sample of the population of England and Wales. We apply parametric survival models to study the mortality of 450,000 individuals. We conduct sensitivity analysis to assess the impact of entry and exit uncertainty on immigrant mortality rates. The analysis shows that most international migrants have lower mortality than natives in England and Wales. Differences largely persist when we adjust models to entry and exit uncertainty and they become pronounced once we control for individual socioeconomic characteristics. This study supports low mortality among immigrants and shows that results are not a data artefact., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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224. Residential context, migration and fertility in a modern urban society.
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Kulu H and Washbrook E
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Fertility, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Middle Aged, Socioeconomic Factors, Suburban Population, United Kingdom, Vital Statistics, Young Adult, Birth Rate, Emigration and Immigration, Family Characteristics, Reproductive Behavior statistics & numerical data, Residence Characteristics, Urban Population
- Abstract
This study examines fertility variation by residential context in Britain. While there is a large literature on fertility trends and determinants in industrialised countries, to date longitudinal research on spatial fertility variation has been restricted to the Nordic countries. We study fertility variation across regions of different sizes, and within urban regions by distinguishing between central cities and suburbs. We use vital statistics and longitudinal data and apply event history analysis. We investigate the extent to which the socio-economic characteristics of couples and selective migrations explain fertility variation between residential contexts, and the extent to which contextual factors potentially play a role. Our analysis shows that fertility levels decline as the size of an urban area increases; within urban regions suburbs have significantly higher fertility levels than city centres. Differences in fertility by residential context persist when we control for the effect of population composition and selective migrations., (Copyright © 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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225. Marriage duration and divorce: the seven-year itch or a lifelong itch?
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Kulu H
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Family Characteristics, Female, Finland, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Time Factors, Divorce statistics & numerical data, Marriage statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Previous studies have shown that the risk of divorce is low during the first months of marriage; it then increases, reaches a maximum, and thereafter begins to decline. Some researchers consider this pattern consistent with the notion of a "seven-year itch," while others argue that the rising-falling pattern of divorce risk is a consequence of misspecification of longitudinal models because of omitted covariates or unobserved heterogeneity. The aim of this study is to investigate the causes of the rising-falling pattern of divorce risk. Using register data from Finland and applying multilevel hazard models, the analysis supports the rising-falling pattern of divorce by marriage duration: the risk of marital dissolution increases, reaches its peak, and then gradually declines. This pattern persists when I control for the sociodemographic characteristics of women and their partners. The inclusion of unobserved heterogeneity in the model leads to some changes in the shape of the baseline risk; however, the rising-falling pattern of the divorce risk persists.
- Published
- 2014
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226. Interrelationships between childbearing and housing transitions in the family life course.
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Kulu H and Steele F
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- Female, Finland, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Pregnancy, Family Characteristics, Housing statistics & numerical data, Parturition, Reproductive Behavior statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Research has examined the effect of family changes on housing transitions and childbearing patterns within various housing types. Although most research has investigated how an event in one domain of family life depends on the current state in another domain, the interplay between them has been little studied. This study examines the interrelationships between childbearing decisions and housing transitions. We use rich longitudinal register data from Finland and apply multilevel event history analysis to allow for multiple births and housing changes over the life course. We investigate the timing of fertility decisions and housing choices with respect to each other. We model childbearing and housing transitions jointly to control for time-invariant unobserved characteristics of women, which may simultaneously influence their fertility behavior and housing choices, and we show how joint modeling leads to a deeper understanding of the interplay between the two domains of family life.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
227. Moving and union dissolution.
- Author
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Boyle PJ, Kulu H, Cooke T, Gayle V, and Mulder CH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Austria, Canada, Demography, Emigration and Immigration trends, Europe, Female, Geography, Humans, Male, Models, Statistical, New Zealand, Population Dynamics trends, Retrospective Studies, Risk, United States, Emigration and Immigration statistics & numerical data, Marital Status statistics & numerical data, Population Dynamics statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This paper examines the effect of migration and residential mobility on union dissolution among married and cohabiting couples. Moving is a stressful life event, and a large, multidisciplinary literature has shown that family migration often benefits one partner (usually the man) more than the other Even so, no study to date has examined the possible impact of within-nation geographical mobility on union dissolution. We base our longitudinal analysis on retrospective event-history data from Austria. Our results show that couples who move frequently have a significantly higher risk of union dissolution, and we suggest a variety of mechanisms that may explain this.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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