搜索结果: 1-6 共查到“人口学 young adults”相关记录6条 . 查询时间(0.125 秒)
Sibling support and the educational prospects of young adults in Malawi
economic transfers education siblings social capital
2014/11/26
Background: Extended kin networks are an important social and economic resource in Africa. Existing research has focused primarily on intergenerational ties, but much less is known about "lateral" tie...
The changing determinants of UK young adults’ living arrangements
UK young adults’ living arrangements young adults
2014/11/20
The postponement of partnership formation and parenthood in the context of an early
average age at leaving home has resulted in increased heterogeneity in the living
arrangements of young adults i...
The changing living arrangements of young adults in the UK
The changing living arrangements young adults the UK
2010/1/20
Patterns of leaving the parental home and transitions to independent living, partnership and family formation in the UK are now far more protracted and diverse than they were in the recent past. Over ...
Multiple Sexual Partners Among U.S. Adolescents and Young Adults
Sexual Partners Young Adults U.S. Adolescents
2009/9/14
Context: Because many teenagers and young adults fail to use condoms correctly and consistently, the number of sexual partners they have is an important risk factor for sexually transmitted diseases, ...
The Relationship of Substance Use to Sexual Activity Among Young Adults in the United States
Sexual Activity United States Young Adults
2009/9/11
Data on substance use and sexual activity from a nationally representative, probability-based sample of young adults aged 18-30 in 1990 indicate that 86% of respondents had had sex in the previous 12 ...
Similarities and differences between two cohorts of young adults in Italy Results of a CATI survey on transition to adulthood
delay of family formation Italy transition to adulthood
2008/12/12
The paper analyses the results of a CATI survey, consisting on a representative national sample of 3083 young people of two different generations: the 23-27th and the 33-37th in the first half of 2004...