Academic literature on the topic '1603 Demography'

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Journal articles on the topic "1603 Demography"

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Backhouse, Marcel F. "The strangers at work in sandwich: Native envy of an industrious minority 1561–1603." Immigrants & Minorities 10, no. 3 (November 1991): 70–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02619288.1991.9974767.

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Jones, Sue. "'Big Data' and Parish Registers: a Case Study of Mortality in Early Modern Non-Metropolitan Surrey." Local Population Studies 107 (2021): 12–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.35488/lps107.2021.12.

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This article uses aggregate analysis of parish registers to consider mortality in the early modern period. Based on a case study of the majority of the historical county of Surrey between about 1550 and 1750, it explores the nature and geographical distribution of mortality crises and seasonal patterns of mortality in normal, non-crisis, times. For the former it focusses mainly on two crises only a few years apart but with different causes, the dearth of the late 1590s and an outbreak of plague in 1603.
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Evans, Charles M., and Angela E. Evans. "Plague – a disease of children and servants? A study of the parish records of St Peter upon Cornhill, London from 1580 to 1605." Continuity and Change 34, no. 2 (July 15, 2019): 183–208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0268416019000158.

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AbstractA study of the parish records of St Peter upon Cornhill in London from 1580 to 1605 revealed that children suffered a greater increase in mortality than adults in the plague years of 1593 and 1603, and servants accounted for the majority of deaths within the 15–24 age group. Some family groups avoided the plague altogether, others suffered a single burial, however in some cases, individuals within the same family household were buried within a short period of each other. The epidemiological pattern is complex and is moderated by social and demographic networks. Comparisons are made with modern epidemics caused by Yersinia pestis.
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Houdaille, Jacques. "La noblesse française 1600-1900." Population (French Edition) 44, no. 3 (May 1989): 501. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1533415.

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Houdaille, Jacques. "La noblesse française avant 1600." Population (French Edition) 45, no. 6 (November 1990): 1070. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/1533566.

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Dubert, Isidro. "La mortalité en Galice, 1600-1850." Annales de démographie historique 1996, no. 1 (1996): 221–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/adh.1996.1919.

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Thomsen, T., M. Aadahl, M. L. Hetland, and B. A. Esbensen. "SAT0606-HPR HOW DO THE PATIENTS THAT DECLINE TO PARTICIPATE IN A LIFESTYLE INTERVENTION STUDY DIFFER FROM THOSE WHO ACCEPT? A REGISTER-BASED CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY." Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases 79, Suppl 1 (June 2020): 1263.2–1263. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2020-eular.4154.

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Background:A recently conducted randomized controlled trial (Joint Resources Sedentary Behavior Intervention study (JR-SB)) aimed to reduce sedentary behavior and increase light-intensity physical activity in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Patients were recruited from a rheumatology outpatient clinic and the intervention consisted of three motivational counselling sessions followed by text message reminders. The results showed highly significant between-group differences on behavioral, patient-reported and cardio-metabolic outcomes, both on a short- and long-term basis (1;2). Since a relatively large fraction (58%) of invited patients initially declined to participate in the trial, we decided to explore if and how the declining patients differed from the included patients. The findings may inform which patient characteristics to consider in implementing a lifestyle intervention in clinical practice.Objectives:To compare socio-demographic, clinical and lifestyle factors between included patients and patients declining to participate in the JR-SB study at the time where study inclusion commenced.Methods:We conducted a retrospective register-based cross-sectional study. All patients with RA, who had been invited to participate in the JR-SB study during 2013-2014 were identified in the DANBIO registry. Patients’ clinical and lifestyle data were also retrieved from DANBIO while data on socio-demography was extracted from Statistics Denmark. Differences between participants and decliners were determined by an independent t-test or chi-square test.Results:Of invited patients (n=801), a total of 467 (58%) declined participation in the JR-SB study during 2013-2014. See Table 1 for characteristics and comparison of participants and decliners.Table 1.Participants’ and decliners’ characteristics; (n (%) unless otherwise stated)Participants(n=150)Decliners(n=467)P-value(x2)Women121 (80.7)358 (76.7)0.30Age (years), mean (SD)58.5 (11.7)60.8 (12.9)0.045aLiving with partner96 (64)293 (62.7)0.78Working57 (38)157 (33.6)0.15RA duration (years), mean (SD)13.8 (11.1)13.7 (10.8)0.92aPain (VAS), mean (SD)34.4 (21.8)29.1 (24.5)0.046aFatigue (VAS), mean (SD)44.2 (26.0)39.5 (28.4)0.14aSmoking(n=61)27 (44.2)(n=220)130 (59.1)0.041Regular exercise (min 1-2 times/week)(n=29)23 (79.3)(n=89)50 (56.2)0.026VAS – Visual Analogue ScaleNumbers in bold indicate the total number of responders on smoking and exercise statusaDetermined by an independent t-testConclusion:Patients who declined to participate in a randomized controlled trial aiming at reducing sedentary behavior were often smokers, had less regular exercise habits and were older than those who accepted to participate. This indicates that the intervention did not appeal to all patients with RA. The findings should be considered in the implementation of lifestyle interventions in clinical rheumatology practice.References:[1]Thomsen T et al. Ann Rheum Dis 2017 Sep;76(9):1603-6.[2]Thomsen T, et al. Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken) 2019 Sep 10.Disclosure of Interests:Tanja Thomsen: None declared, Mette Aadahl: None declared, Merete L. Hetland Grant/research support from: BMS, MSD, AbbVie, Roche, Novartis, Biogen and Pfizer, Consultant of: Eli Lilly, Speakers bureau: Orion Pharma, Biogen, Pfizer, CellTrion, Merck and Samsung Bioepis, Bente Appel Esbensen: None declared
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Deb Roy, Rama. "Glimpses on the history of Calcutta, 1600-1800." Annales de démographie historique 1988, no. 1 (1989): 243–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/adh.1989.1718.

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Kennedy, Liam, Kerby A. Miller, and Brian Gurrin. "ULSTER: Communal Conflict and Demographic Change, 1600-2010." International Journal of Diversity in Organizations, Communities, and Nations: Annual Review 10, no. 2 (2010): 225–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.18848/1447-9532/cgp/v10i02/39852.

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Houston, Robert Allan, and Charles W. J. Withers. "Population mobility in Scotland and Europe, 1600-1900 : a comparative perspective." Annales de démographie historique 1990, no. 1 (1990): 285–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/adh.1990.1772.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "1603 Demography"

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Matthews, R. P. "Roman Catholic recusancy in Monmouthshire, 1603-1689 : a demographic and morphological analysis." Thesis, Cardiff University, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.297523.

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Roman Catholic recusancy was a significant component of the religious demography of Monmouthshire throughout the seventeenth century; but its importance has been simplified through an historiographical tradition that has focused upon the earls of Worcester and a small number of recusant gentry. The present study, drawing largely upon an examination of all of the very substantial Monmouthshire entries in the Exchequer Recusant Rolls, has sought a consideration of the nature of Catholic nonconformity through a statistical analysis of the record of recusancy conviction and the delineation of a social morphology of Catholic recusancy in Monmouthshire between 1603 and 1689. The conclusions derivable from this reconstructive analysis have been tested against a range of data of demographic significance - most notably, that provided by the Compton Census, 1.676 - and the available evidence of Catholic allegiance during the First Civil War: they suggest Catholic recusancy in the county to have been a far wider and more complex phenomenon than would appear from an emphasis. upon the centrality of the earls of Worcester. The record of recusancy convictions indicates i,nstead a social morphology essentially reflective of society at large, and a nonconformist culture that was popular and parochial rather than seigneurial and gentry-orientated. To a certain extent, the role played by the local recusant gentry in the shaping of a Catholic demography was catalytic; but the evidence does not suggest it to have been determinative. Rather, the numerical extent, continuity and geography of Catholic recusancy in Monmouthshire between 1603 and 1689 may be attributed to a complex amalgamation of factors that were topographical and administrative, which owed as much to th~ ministrations of itinerant priests as to the influence of Catholic gentry, and which was consolidated in family relationships and the development of a recusant popular culture.
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Oliveira, Andreia Lagarto Correia de. "Correlatos da qualidade de vida de estudantes universitários." Master's thesis, [s.n.], 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10284/1673.

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Dissertação de Mestrado apresentada à Universidade Fernando Pessoa como parte dos requisitos para obtenção do grau de Mestre em Psicologia Clínica e da Saúde.
Ao longo da vida académica, os estudantes universitários passam por um importante período de desenvolvimento pessoal e social, com possíveis implicações na sua Qualidade de Vida (QDV). Assim, pretende-se com este estudo identificar e explorar os seus correlatos entre variáveis sociodemográficas, clínicas, perturbações do sono e perturbações afectivas. Participaram 175 estudantes (81,1% do sexo feminino, média de idades 20,93 anos) da Universidade de Aveiro, a frequentar o 3º ano de diferentes licenciaturas no ano lectivo 2008/2009. Foi desenvolvido um Questionário Sócio-demográfico e Clínico que se administrou colectivamente com: o World Health Organization Quality of Life-Bref (WHOQOL-Bref), a Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) e a Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). Os resultados apontam para uma amostra, no geral, sem problemas significativos a nível da QDV e referidos correlatos, contudo, também se concluiu que: o sexo feminino apresenta pior QDV; quanto pior a percepção do estado de saúde menor a QDV; e, quanto mais problemas do sono, sintomas de ansiedade e depressão, pior a QDV. Estes resultados confirmam, em geral, os dados da literatura analisada, tendo implicações para a prática clínica. Throughout their academic life, college students go through an important period of personal and social development, with possible implications in their Quality of Life (QOL). This study aims, therefore, at identifying and exploring the correlates of college students’ QOL between socio-demographic, clinical, sleep disorders, and affective disorders variables. The subjects of the study were 175 students (81,1% females, average age 20,93) from the University of Aveiro, attending the third year of different degrees in the school year of 2008/2009. A Socio-Demographic and Clinical Questionnaire was devised and applied alongside with: the World Health Organization Quality of Life-Bref (WHOQOL-Bref), the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). The outcomes reveal a sample that, in general, shows no significant problems at the QOL level and the reported correlates; however, we could also conclude that: females reveal worse QOL; the worse the health level perception is the lesser QOL; and, the more sleeping problems, anxiety and depression symptoms, the worse QOL. In general, the results confirm the data conveyed by the literature reviewed, thereby having implications in the clinical practice.
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Hed, Helen M. E. "Opportunity for natural selection in Sweden : a study of childhood mortality and differential reproductivity." Doctoral thesis, Umeå universitet, Teknisk-naturvetenskapliga fakulteten, 1986. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-61320.

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Opportunity for natural selection in human populations has so far mainly been studied on anthropological data for tribal populations or on census data for nations. The present study is mainly based on data on individual lifehistories but also, for part of the longitudinal study, on census data. Six of the populations, Nedertorneå, Tuna, Svinnegarn, Trosa, Locknevi and Fleninge are parishes. These sets of data covers the period 1800-1850 as defined by the birthyears of the women. The data for the longitudinal study are derived from two sour­ces, a biography over all clergymen in the diocese of Linköping, cove­ring the period 1600-1845, and material published by the National Swe­dish Central Bureau of Statistics (SCB) that covers the period 1750-1980. For each subpopulation data on childhood mortality and female fertility has been collected and from these data Crow's index of opportunity for natural selection has been calculated. The original index has also been modified in order to estimate the importance of childlessness in relation to the total index. The study shows that for the periods and the populations studied, there is a considerable opportunity for natural selection both through mortality and through differential fertility and that, during our cen­tury, differential fertility has become the main asset for natural se­lection, as mortality has been reduced to very low levels. It is also obvious that childlessness is an important factor as regards natural selection in human populations. The cross-sectional study shows signi­ficant differences between the populations for all components of the index. The longitudinal study covers when, the two sets of data are combined, a period of over 350 years, 1600-1980. Over this period changes in index of opportunity for natural selection have occured but these changes are not very drastic as compared to other longitudinal studies. However, within a separate region there can be drastic chang­es in index between decades and there are large differences between regions. Mortality and fertility patterns have been studied from different angles. With the exception for the census data, each woman in the stu­dy has be followed from 16 to 40 years of age and each of her children (if any) has be followed from birth to 16 years of age or death, if prior. Therefore it was possible to obtain distributions for age at first childbirth, sibship size, succesful sibship size, childhood mor­tality by age at death, female mortality, and childlessness, total and marital. In some cases a study of sex ratio at birth and at 16 years of age, and birth intervals, have been made. Statistical analysis of the results shows significant differences between populations for all tests that have been applied. The Linköping data was analysed for dif­ferences between periods. Significant differences were found for all of the parameters with the exception of female mortality.

Härtill 5 uppsatser

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Becker, Peter. "Leben und Lieben in einem kalten Land : Sexualität im Spannungsfeld von Ökonomie und Demographie : das Beispiel St. Lambrecht, 1600-1850 /." Frankfurt u.a. : Campus-Verl, 1990. http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&doc_number=001747330&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA.

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Zugl.: Graz, University, Diss., 1988 u.d.T.: Becker, Peter: Voreheliche Sexualität und Heiratsverhalten im Gebiet der Abtei St. Lambrecht 1600-1849.
Teilw. zugl.: Diss., 1988 u.d.T.: Becker, Peter: Voreheliche Sexualität und Heiratsverhalten im Gebiet der Abtei St. Lambrecht.
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Saber, Abdullatef. "The Impact of Financial Literacy on Household Wealth in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia." Thesis, 2020. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/42152/.

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This thesis aims to measure the level of financial literacy among Saudi workers. It also focuses on the impact of financial literacy and demographic factors including age, gender, level of education, work experience, marital status, number of children, sector of work and level of income, on household wealth of Saudi workers. These objectives were measured in an empirical study using a survey method. The data collected underwent several steps of analysis including univariate, bivariate and multivariate (multiple regression) analyses. Since Saudi Arabia is a key country in the Middle East and is part of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) regional economic community this study focuses on one of the most important studies in the region. The study is especially important for Saudi Arabia itself for several reasons. First, financial literacy and household wealth are an important area of investigation because financial crises have affected many individuals in the country. For example, in mid- 2015 international oil prices dropped and the Saudi economy was greatly affected and in response the Saudi Arabian government reduced its budget, including salaries. Moreover, the government introduced a new taxation system in 2018 in addition to a significant increase in the basic costs of daily life requirements such as electricity, water and petroleum, which increased by more than 200%. Thus, people in Saudi Arabia were forced to change their spending patterns to accommodate their new income levels and higher daily expenses. Second, in 2013, the Saudi government revealed its intention to enhance the economic situation of the country through Saudi Vision 2030, which aims to reduce the country’s dependence on oil as its main source of income. This goal can be achieved only through effective collaboration between the government and financially literate people who have the skills required to create wealth for both themselves and their country through wise financial decision-making. This study provides practical recommendations to policymakers and key individuals in Saudi Arabia and the MENA by shedding light on the most affected segment; the financially illiterate. The study confirms that demographic issues have a significant relationship with household wealth. It also transpired that financial literacy is instrumental in many of the practical aspects of people’s day-to-day financial behaviour.
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Oraison, Humberto Manuel. "Living with Back Pain : a Biopsychosocial Analysis of Contributing Factors." Thesis, 2016. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32590/.

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Back pain is a major health problem in the Western World impacting on individuals, their families and the whole society. Back pain causes significant economic costs due to health expenses and absenteeism from work. Most cases of back pain respond well to treatments and are resolved within weeks. However, some individuals do not respond well to medical treatments and experience persistent back pain that becomes chronic in nature. Chronic back pain is characterised by its duration and its poor response to medical interventions. The literature researched indicated that in most cases the experience of chronic back pain is heavily influenced by psychosocial factors, which impact on individuals more than the original injury or disease. There is limited literature in relation to biopsychosocial factors and treatment up-take. The aim of this study was to explore the impact of biopsychosocial factors in the experience of chronic back pain. It was hypothesised that biopsychosocial factors would have an impact on the number of treatments received and the level of disability reported. A total of 201 adult participants (men and women) completed a battery of questionnaires that collected demographic information, psychological distress, social support, pain levels and disability scores. The findings indicated that psychosocial factors had a greater impact on the number of treatment sessions and reported disability than level and/or duration of pain. Education level was the strongest marker for both hypotheses with tertiary educated participants reporting significantly higher numbers of treatment sessions and lower disability scores. The findings of this study supported the Biopsychosocial Model of Health and the Theory of Social Causation. In addition, the findings supported previous research that advocated that a diagnosis of chronic back pain is a unique condition different from acute or temporary pain. Furthermore, the findings supported the creation of new diagnostic and measurement tools for chronic back that include psychological and social measures in addition to biological indicators. Finally, the findings offered renewed backing for interdisciplinary approaches to the treatment of chronic back pain in light to its multifaceted nature.
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Books on the topic "1603 Demography"

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Glimp, David. Increase and multiply: Governing cultural reproduction in early modern England. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2002.

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Increase and multiply: Governing cultural reproduction in early modern England. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2003.

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Moring, Beatrice. Skärgårdsbor: Hushåll, familj och demografi i finländsk kustbygd på 1600-, 1700- och 1800-talen. Helsingfors: Finska vetenskaps-societeten, 1994.

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Magaña, Mario Alberto, editor of compilation and Carbajal López, David, editor of compilation, eds. El impacto demográfico de la viruela en México de la época colonial al Siglo XX. Zamora, Michoacán: El Colegio de Michoacán, 2010.

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J, Robinson David. Laricollaguas: Ecology, economy, and demography in a seventeenth-century Peruvian village. Boulder: Westview Press, 1997.

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The Huguenot population of France, 1600-1685: The demographic fate and customs of a religious minority. Philadelphia, PA: American Philosophical Society, 1991.

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Benedict, Philip. The Huguenot population of France, 1600-1685: The demographic fate and customs of a religious minority. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1991.

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Benedict, Philip. The Huguenot population of France, 1600-1685: The demographic fate and customs of a religious minority. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1991.

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Peter, Becker. Leben und Lieben in einem kalten Land: Sexualität im Spannungsfeld von Ökonomie und Demographie : das Beispiel St. Lambrecht 1600-1850. Frankfurt/Main: Campus, 1990.

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Behar, Cem. L'ombre démesurée de Halley: Les recherches démographiques dans les Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society (1683-1800). Paris: INED éditions, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "1603 Demography"

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Safaei Hakimi, Ashkan. "Demographic Aspects of Iranian Immigrants’ Integration in Israel." In Ethnic Religious Minorities in Iran, 147–67. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-1633-5_7.

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Borlik, Todd Andrew. "‘Purple Plagues or Crimson War’." In Shakespeare Beyond the Green World, 167—C7.P69. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192866639.003.0008.

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Abstract Chapter 7 sifts the Jacobean state’s efforts to impose its authority over London, its suburbs, and Irish plantations—efforts which were underwritten by the emergent discipline of demography. It turns out that Shakespeare’s Jacobean plays share the king’s acute anxieties about urban overpopulation in the aftermath of the 1603 plague. The chapter detects proto-Malthusian rhetoric in Measure for Measure’s grim view of human sexuality, implicating the levelling of Overdone’s bawdy houses with legislative crackdowns on urban sprawl and unwanted pregnancies. Population pressures reached a boiling point again after the 1607 dearth but Coriolanus poses tough questions about the state’s attempt to vent them through war or through the colonization of war-ravaged Ulster. Coriolanus reckons with early modern justifications of war as a medicinal blood-letting of the body politic, an opinion trumpeted by anti-Irish hawks at the Stuart court, and responds to the crisis ignited by the rebellion of the Gaelic chieftain Cahir O’Doherty, who turned on his allies and burned down the English settlement at Derry. Shakespeare’s Roman tragedy is also an Irish tragedy. To sketch a fuller picture of the environmental degradation Ulster suffered, however, the chapter turns from Shakespeare to Irish bardic poetry.
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"Demography." In Batavia-Jakarta, 1600-2000, 118–40. BRILL, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004486577_016.

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Harper, Sarah. "3. The fathers of demographic thought." In Demography: A Very Short Introduction, 14–23. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780198725732.003.0003.

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Demographic ideas can be traced back to antiquity, but it is generally accepted that demography originated in the middle of the 17th century with the English statistician, John Graunt (1620–74), and his primitive life tables, which were the first attempt to examine statistical regularities inherent within the numbers of births and deaths. ‘The fathers of demographic thought’ describes the diverse theorists who founded and developed the study of demography. It begins with Graunt and then outlines the input of Sir William Petty (1623–87), Edmund Halley (1656–1742), Richard Price (1723–91), and Thomas Malthus (1766–1834). Their foundations were central to developing the relationship between analytical reasoning, numerical problems, and arithmetical records.
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Rofman, Rafael, and Ignacio Apella. "Demographic Trends." In When We're Sixty-Four: Opportunities and Challenges for Public Policies in a Population-Aging Context in Latin America, 15–24. The World Bank, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1605-5_ch2.

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Sakellariou, Eleni. "Demography, Economy, and Trade." In A Companion to the Renaissance in Southern Italy (1350–1600), 65–93. BRILL, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004526372_005.

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Rofman, Rafael, and Ignacio Apella. "Demographic Transition and Macroeconomic Challenges and Opportunities." In When We're Sixty-Four: Opportunities and Challenges for Public Policies in a Population-Aging Context in Latin America, 59–77. The World Bank, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1605-5_ch4.

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Rofman, Rafael, and Ignacio Apella. "The Role of Demography and Policy in Shaping Future Public Spending." In When We're Sixty-Four: Opportunities and Challenges for Public Policies in a Population-Aging Context in Latin America, 25–57. The World Bank, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1605-5_ch3.

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Hansen, Lars Ivar. "7 The Registers of the ‘Sami Tax’ from 1600 to 1750, and Their Usefulness for Reconstructing Population Development and Settlement in Northern Nordland, Norway." In Indigenous Peoples and Demography, 135–48. Berghahn Books, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780857450036-011.

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"3. Aggregate Demographic Data: An Assessment." In Economic and Demographic Change in Preindustrial Japan, 1600-1868, 38–68. Princeton University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400869374-005.

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Conference papers on the topic "1603 Demography"

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Gal, Iddo, and Anna Trostianitser. "Understanding basic demographic trends: connecting table reading, task design, and context." In Promoting Understanding of Statistics about Society. International Association for Statistical Education, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.52041/srap.16103.

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The paper aims to inform the conceptualization of teaching/learning goals and instructional design related to understanding multivariate statistics that describe trends in society. The paper presents a conceptual analysis leading to identification of a gap in current analyses and instructional sequences focused on interpretation of information in tables [and graphs]. The paper advocates for the need to develop students' ability to reflect about the factors that cause or are related to observed trends, and about their societal implications, and highlights the need to develop task design principles that can promote such understanding. We then present an empirical demonstration of a possible class sequence, and results from an exploratory class activity with 43 students whose responses were content-analysed. Based on these results and the prior analysis, we reflect on benefits in terms of increased motivation and relevance of statistics instruction, and call for the use of task design principles that directly connect data, statistics, and class activities to the actual societal context in which students have to operate as adults, in order to enhance students' statistical literacy and understanding of statistics about society.
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Li, Jing, Kan Zhang, and Xianghong Sun. "Effect of Demographic Variables on Driving Safety." In Second International Conference on Transportation Engineering. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/41039(345)160.

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Aksenova, Marina Y., Elmira F. Miftyakova, and Mariy L. Zotova. "DEMOGRAPHIC PROCESSES OF THE RURAL POPULATION OF THE ULYANOVSK REGION." In Treshnikov readings – 2021 Modern geographical global picture and technology of geographic education. Ulyanovsk State Pedagogical University named after I. N. Ulyanov, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.33065/978-5-907216-08-2-2021-160-161.

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Shamsutdinova, N. "N. Shamsutdinova. Scenarios of demographic development of Russia and CIS countries: the main trends for the period up to 2035." In NaukaFest-2021: collection of materials of the round tables of the Festival of social and Humanitarian science (Ufa, November 24 – December 11, 2021) / ed.: N.M. Lavrenyuk-Isaeva. - Ufa: RIC Bashgu, 2021. - 160 p. Baskir State University, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.33184/ksnf2021-2021-11-24.20.

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Belinić, Barbara, and Petra Šantek. "Detailed design of stage a Križevci-Koprivnica railway corridor." In 7th International Conference on Road and Rail Infrastructure. University of Zagreb Faculty of Civil Engineering, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5592/co/cetra.2022.1391.

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Abstract:
Due to its great geological and transport position, Croatia is part of important international transport corridors and was included in the Trans-European Transport Network when it joined the European Union. The next ten years will be marked by investments in railway infrastructure projects worth an estimated 4.4 billion euros. One of the most important and financially challenging investments are the RH1 and RH2 corridors. Part of the RH2 corridor is the Križevci-Koprivnica line, which runs under the M201 railway line. The construction of the Križevci-Koprivnica line is divided into four stages. The subject of this article is the description of the substructure, drainage and objects of Stage A from Križevci station to Lepavina station. The biggest horizontal reconstruction is expected in front of Lepavina station. The reconstruction of the horizontal and vertical geometry will allow passengers to travel faster, up to 160 km/h. Major infrastructural investments in railways are just around the corner and will bring benefits, both to individuals and society. Future rail passengers can expect safer, more comfortable and faster transport. Better mobility of passengers and goods will promote the development of Croatian regions as well as demographic and economic progress.
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