Přihlásit se k odběru
Přejete si dostávat informaci o vydání tohoto produktu přímo do své e-mailové schránky?
Objednat tištěnou verzi
Tento produkt je možné zakoupit také v tištěné verzi.
Tištěnou verzi lze zakoupit za: 58 Kč.
Články
- Living Arrangements as an Indicator of the Integration of Older Ethnic Russian Immigrants in Estonia
Anne Herm – Allan Puur – Michel Poulain
Demografie, 66(2): 113–129
https://doi.org/10.54694/dem.0338Abstract
This study is about living arrangements of older ethnic Russians living in Estonia most of whom are long-term immigrants. Studies involving immigrant populations have suggested that the integration process would decrease their differences with the host population, including their living arrangement preferences. Our investigation shows that despite long-term residence in country, living arrangements’ pattern of ethnic Russians in Estonia is rather different from that of Estonians and that can be explained by low integration. The study is based on the microdata of the Estonian 2011 population and housing census and the 5% sample of the Russian 2010 census from the IPUMS database. In the first part of the analysis, we employ origin-destination perspective to comparing living arrangements of Russians in Estonia with Estonians and Russians in Russia. In the second part, we use binary logistic regression to study the association between living arrangements, migration background and integration to host society.Keywords
older persons, living arrangements, integration, immigrants, ethnic group, education, marital status, Estonia - The Marital Fertility of Men and Women in Czechia before the First Demographic Transition and in the Current Population
Jitka Slabá – Barbora Janáková Kuprová
Demografie, 66(2): 130–153
https://doi.org/10.54694/dem.0339Abstract
The aim of this study is to analyse the changes in the marital fertility of men and women in Czechia before the first demographic transition (data obtained by excerpting the parish registers of Škvorec manor in the years 1760–1839) and in the current population (data from the Czech GGS II based on interviews between 2020 and 2022) using a unified methodology. The results confirm previous findings on historical and modern marital fertility – determining the overall intensity of marital fertility by the duration of marriage in the historical population, the decrease in marital fertility by the decrease in the number of higher-order births in the modern population, etc. The results show that the timing of the first childbirth in marriage is similar in both (the historical and the modern) populations. Historical marriages with the same number of children have a much shorter reproductive window than modern marriages, with no differences at the beginning of the reproductive period, but with differences especially at the end. The timing of reproduction (median age at birth of the first child) does not differ for first marriage in modern and historical populations. In the historical population, women’s fertility was limited at a lower age than men’s fertility. In the modern population, the intensity of fertility by sex does not differ. In both populations the median duration of the reproductive window does not differ according to either sex or marriage order.Keywords
marital fertility, first and second demographic transition, female and male fertility - Demografické stárnutí v Česku mezi lety 2012–2022 prostřednictvím vybraných retrospektivních a prospektivních ukazatelů
Filip Čábela – Luděk Šídlo
Demografie, 66(2): 154–165
https://doi.org/10.54694/dem.0341Abstract
Demographic ageing is considered a significant phenomenon and one of the most important population issues of the 21st century. It is a process that has no parallel in human history but is completely natural. The ageing of the population itself is a consequence of the changing quality of life, a new approach to lifestyle, and improvements in the health status of the population, all of which lead to improvements in the level of mortality, especially at old age. The concept of prospective age is not based on the number of years that a given person has already lived, but on the number of years that people probably have left to live. This paper presents the concept of prospective age and the development of prospective indicators using the example of Czechia between 2012 and 2022, focusing on a comparison of retrospective indicators with prospective ones. The paper also reveals the effect of the Covid-19 pandemic on demographic ageing indicators.Keywords
demographic ageing, prospective age, retrospective and prospective indicators, Covid-19, Czechia