The dynamics of population change in general and changes in family size and spacing in particular are long-standing issues of intense controversy and concern. So too, are the methods of explanation employed by social scientists in studying these and other social phenomena. Originally published in 1977, this book offered an account of a research programme designed to explain the changes in fertility in post-war England, and it offered a contribution to both debates. First, the authors provide an account of the factors that influenced family size and spacing in the post-war period, rejecting both classical population theory on the Malthusian model and more recent economic theories of fertility. Second, the authors discuss the weaknesses of the survey techniques and the associated methods of inference that formed the basis of their research design, as methods for producing explanations of social phenomena.
The ideal gift for all parents!A funny, pithy, and relatable collection of poems for all the dads and carers who can never seem to be right about anything.
'Nic Aubury's poetry is proper poetry in...
Thinking about Thinking examines philosophy from a variety of perspectives as a practice realized by persons who communicate with one another while reflecting about the meaning of human life and...
The goal of Christian living is to be in the world but not of the world. We all wish to live in the yacht, separated from turmoil.Steven W. Ingram, who has spent forty-six years in ministry,...