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Tables

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2018

Naomi R. Cahn
Affiliation:
George Washington University School of Law
June Carbone
Affiliation:
University of Minnesota School of Law
Laurie Fields DeRose
Affiliation:
Georgetown University, Washington DC
W. Bradford Wilcox
Affiliation:
University of Virginia
Type
Chapter
Information
Unequal Family Lives
Causes and Consequences in Europe and the Americas
, pp. xiii - xiv
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2018
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Tables

  1. 2A.1Results of factor analysis of family indicators in Latin America, 2000

  2. 2A.2APercentage of mothers among women aged from 25 to 29 by union status, educational attainment, and census round

  3. 2A.2BPercentage of women aged from 25 to 29 who reside in an extended household by motherhood status, educational attainment, and census round

  4. 2A.2CPercentage of women aged from 35 to 44 who are household heads by partnership/motherhood status, educational attainment, and census round

  5. 5.1US male employment-to-population ratios: 2015 vs. selected depression years

  6. 5.2Who is more likely – and who is less likely – to be in the 7 million pool of prime-age NILF males? Relative odds by demographic characteristic: 2015

  7. 6.1Percentages of children by family types, PISA 2012

  8. 6.2Logistic regression coefficients of mother’s education on the probability of being a single mother

  9. 6.3OLS and logistic regression coefficients of effects of children’s family structure and mother’s education on math test scores, grade repetition, and truancy

  10. 6.4OLS regression coefficients of main effects and interaction terms of children’s family structure and mother’s education on math test scores for each country

  11. 6.5Logistic regression coefficients of main effects and interaction terms of children’s family structure and mother’s education on grade repetition for each country

  12. 6.6Logistic regression coefficients of main effects and interaction terms of children’s family structure and mother’s education on truancy for each country

  13. 7.1Countries according to the percentage of mothers who are single and the educational gradient in single motherhood

  14. 8.1GDP growth by proportion of adults who are married, country-level regression

  15. 8.2GDP growth by proportion of children in two-parent homes, country-level regression

  16. 11.1Labor market polarization across Europe

  17. 11.2Female labor force participation rates over time (age 25 to 54)

  18. 11.3Gender inequality, social expenditures, and percentage of children under 17 living in poverty in two- vs. single-parent families, circa 2010

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