Social Science Quarterly, Volume 69Southwestern Social Science Association and the University of Texas, 1988 - Political science Includes section "Book reviews." |
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Results 1-3 of 58
Page 112
... Survey ( NLS ; Center for Hu- man Resource Research , 1986 ) . These panel surveys initially included in- terviews with a nationally representative sample of about 5,000 young men aged 14-24 in 1966 and about 5,000 young women aged 14 ...
... Survey ( NLS ; Center for Hu- man Resource Research , 1986 ) . These panel surveys initially included in- terviews with a nationally representative sample of about 5,000 young men aged 14-24 in 1966 and about 5,000 young women aged 14 ...
Page 113
... survey year prior to migration were classified as migrants and assigned the survey year after the move occurred as the " base migrant year . " If the respondent made another move , the assigned " base migrant year " was the survey year ...
... survey year prior to migration were classified as migrants and assigned the survey year after the move occurred as the " base migrant year . " If the respondent made another move , the assigned " base migrant year " was the survey year ...
Page 127
... survey data collected from residents of public housing projects were used . The survey was conducted by Westat , Inc. , under a contract to the Department of HUD . The survey was administered to two groups of families : those residing ...
... survey data collected from residents of public housing projects were used . The survey was conducted by Westat , Inc. , under a contract to the Department of HUD . The survey was administered to two groups of families : those residing ...
Contents
Volume 69 Number | 1 |
Fact or Fiction? | 24 |
A Tale of Two Theses | 40 |
Copyright | |
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abortion acid rain activities AFDC American analysis areas assimilation behavior birth Cajun homeland CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ CBD sales central coefficient coproduction correlated costs cutbacks decentralization dependent variable dollar auction economic effect estimates ethnic factors Gilman groundwater Health Hispanics impact important included income increase indicate individuals industry infant injury rates issue Journal know-nothings labor legislators measure ment migration nations nomic NYIA OBRA organizations OSHA patterns percent percentage Political Science population positions Press Pro-Choice Pro-Life problem programs regression relationship relatively respondents retail risk role strain rural safety sample sick role significant social social trap society Sociology sodomy standards statistically status structure survey symptoms Table teachers Texas Tech University theory tion UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA urban primacy variables violence volunteers women York