Results 301 to 310 of about 1,439,546 (351)

Soviet theories of economic demography: A survey

open access: closedJournal of Comparative Economics, 1983
Abstract Soviet theories of economic demography are surveyed. The Urlanis-Strumilin model of fertility and labor-force participation strongly parallels the utility-maximization models of household decision making developed in the West. Family size is selected on the basis of the costs and benefits of higher-order children.
Paul R. Gregory
openaire   +4 more sources

Economic Resilience, Demography and Local Systems: A Commentary on Theory and Assessment

open access: closed, 2017
Despite the growing relevance of the 'resilience' dimension, this concept has not been yet carefully defined or satisfactory measured within the more general issue of socio-ecological resilience. Resilience is the capacity of a local system to tolerate disturbance without collapsing into a state controlled by different conditions and processes ...
Luca Salvati
openaire   +3 more sources

Demography-aware COVID-19 Confinement with Game Theory

International Conference on Artificial Intelligence Circuits and Systems, 2021
In the last decades, emerging and re-emerging epidemics such as AIDS, measles, SARS, HINI influenza, and tuberculosis cause death to millions of people each year.
Sreenitha Kasarapu   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Demography of Corporations and Industries

, 1999
Most analysts of corporations and industries adopt the focal perspective of a single prototypical organization. Many analysts also study corporations primarily in terms of their internal organizational structures or as complex systems of financial ...
H. Rao, Glenn R Carroll, M. Hannan
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Value, Technical Change and Crisis: Explorations in Marxist Economic Theory

, 1992
This volume in the ?General Demography of Africa? series encompasses many nations and focuses on a feature of the censuses ? household relationships. African households rank among the most complex in the world.
D. Laibman
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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