2019

 

Spéder, Zsolt, Lívia Murinkó and Livia Sz. Oláh, 2019. Cash support vs. taxincentives: The differential impact of policy interventions on third births in contemporary Hungary. Population Studies, online, DOI: 10.1080/00324728.20191694165.

Duvander, A. Z., Lappegård, T., Andersen, S. N., Garðarsdóttir, Ó., Neyer, G., & Viklund, I., 2019. Parental leave policies and continued childbearing in Iceland, Norway, and Sweden. Demographic Research, 40, 1501-1528.

Enström-Öst, Cecilia, and Mats Wilhelmsson, 2019. The long-term consequences of youth housing for childbearing and higher education. Journal of Policy Modeling

Ma, Li, Andersson, Gunnar, Duvander, Ann-Zofie & Marie Evertsson, 2019. Fathers’ Uptake of Parental Leave: Forerunners and Laggards in Sweden, 1993–2010. Journal of Social Policy, 1-21.

 

2018

Eriksson, Helen, 2018. Taking Turns or Halving It All: Care Trajectories of Dual-Caring Couples. European Journal of Population. DOI: 10.1007/s10680-018-9473-5.

Frejka, Tomas, Frances Goldscheider & Trude Lappegård, 2018. The Two-part gender revolution, women’s second shift and changing cohort fertility. Comparative Population Studies, 43: 99-130.

Jalovaara, Marika, Gerda Neyer, Gunnar Andersson, Johan Dahlberg, Lars Dommermuth, Peter Fallesen and Trude Lappegård, 2018. Education, Gender, and Cohort Fertility in the Nordic Countries. European Journal of Population. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10680-018-9492-2.

Lappegård, Trude and Elizabeth Thomson, 2018. Intergenerational Transmission of Multipartner Fertility. Demography, 55(6):2205–2228.

Mussino, Eleonora, Ann-Zofie Duvander and Li Ma (2018), Does Time Count? Immigrant Fathers’ Use of Parental Leave for a First Child in Sweden Population-E, 73 (2), 2018, 363-382 DOI: 10.3917/pope.1802.0363

Mussino, Eleonora, Ann-Zofie Duvaner and Tervola, Jussi, 2018. Decomposing the Determinants of Fathers’ Parental Leave Use: Evidence from migration between Finland and Sweden. Journal of European Social Policy First published online October 2018 https://doi.org/10.1177/0958928718792129.

Eleonora Mussino and Livia Ortensi, 2018. Same fertility ideals of the country of origin norm? A study of the personal ideal family size among immigrant women in Italy. Comparative Population Studies Vol. 43 (2018): 243-274

Wesolowski, Katharina & Ferrarini, Tommy, 2018. Family policies and fertility: Examining the link between family policy institutions and fertility rates in 33 countries 1995-2011. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy, Vol. 38 Issue: 11/12, pp.1057-1070, https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSSP-04-2018-0052

 

2017

Aarskaug Wiik, Kenneth, and Eva Bernhardt, 2017. Cohabiting and Married Individuals' Relations With Their Partner's Parents. Journal of Marriage and Family.

Andersson Joona, P., Lanninger, A.W. and Sundström, M., 2017. Etableringsreformens effekter på integrationen av nyanlända, Arbetsmarknad & Arbetsliv Nr 1.

Andersson, Gunnar, Lotta Persson, and Ognjen Obućina, 2017. “Depressed fertility among descendants of immigrants in Sweden”. Demographic Research 36(39): 1149-1184. DOI: 10.4054/DemRes.2017.36.39.

Andersson, G., Thomson, E., & Duntava, A., 2017. Life-table representations of family dynamics in the 21st century. Demographic Research 37(35):1081–1230.

Adjei, Nicholas Kofi, and Sunnee Billingsley, 2017. Childbearing Behavior Before and After the 1994 Population Policies in Ghana. Population Research and Policy Review: 1-21.

Billingsley, S., & Duntava, A., 2017. Putting the pieces together: Fertility trends across 40 years of birth cohorts in 19 post-socialist countries. Post-Soviet Affairs. DOI: 10.1080/1060586X.2017.1293393

Birnbaum, S., Ferrarini, T., Nelson, K., Palme, J. (forthcoming). Changing generational welfare contracts: Just institutions and outcomes. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.

Busetta, A., Cetorelli, V., and Wilson, B. (2017). A Universal Health Care System? Unmet Need for Medical Care Among Regular and Irregular Immigrants in Italy. Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health, Published online. DOI: 10.1007/s10903-017-0566-8.

Bäckman, O. and Nelson, K. (forthcoming). ‘The Egalitarian Paradise?’, in Handbook on Scandinavian Politics. London: Routledge.

Caltabiano, Marcantonio, Chiara Ludovica Comolli and Alessandro Rosina, 2017. The effect of the Great Recession on permanent childlessness in Italy. Demographic Research 37(20), 635-668.

Comolli, Chiara Ludovica, "The fertility response to the Great Recession in Europe and the United States: Structural economic conditions and perceived economic uncertainty",
Demographic Research, volume 36, pp 1549-1600.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, Linda Haas, and Sara Thalberg, 2017. Fathers on leave alone in Sweden: Toward more equal parenthood? Pp. 125-146  In O’Brien, M., Wall, K,. (Eds.) Comparative Perspectives on Work-life Balance and Gender Equality. Fathers on Leave Alone. Life Course Research and Social Policies, Springer Open.

Erman, J. & Härkönen, J. (2017) Parental Separation and School Performance Among Children of Immigrant Mothers in Sweden. European Journal of Population, online first. doi:10.1007/s10680-017-9419-3.

Giuliani, Giuliana and Ann-Zofie Duvander. 2017. “Cash-for-care policy in Sweden: an appraisal of its consequences on female employment”. International Journal of Social Welfare 26(1):49-62.

Härkönen, J. Forthcoming. Single mother poverty: How much do educational differences in single motherhood matter? In Nieuwenhuis, R. & Maldonado, L., Eds. The Triple Bind of Single Parent Families. Bristol: Policy Press.

Härkönen, J., Bernardi, F. & Boertien, D. (2017) Family Dynamics and Child Outcomes: An Overview of Research and Open Questions. European Journal of Population, online first. doi:10.1007/s10680-017-9424-6.

Kulu, Hill, Tina Hannemann, Ariane Pailhé, Karel Neels, Sandra Krapf, Amparo González-Ferrer, and Gunnar Andersson, 2017. Fertility by birth order among the descendants of immigrants in selected European countries. Population and Development Review 43(1): in press. DOI 10.1111/padr.12037.

Neyer, Gerda, Jan M. Hoem, and Gunnar Andersson, 2017. Education and childlessness: The influence of educational field and educational level on childlessness among Swedish and Austrian women. In: Kreyenfeld, M., and Konietzka, D., Eds, Childlessness in Europe: Contexts, Causes and Consequences: 183-207. Doordrecht: Springer. ISBN: 978-3-319-44665-3 (Print) 978-3-319-44667-7 (Online). DOI 10.10007/978-319-44667-7_9 .

Ruppanner, Leah, Maria Brandén, and Jani Turunen, 2017. Does Unequal Housework Lead to Divorce? Evidence from Sweden. Sociology: 0038038516674664.

Ruppanner, Leah, Eva Bernhardt, and Maria Brandén, 2017. Division of housework and his and her view of housework fairness: A typology of Swedish couples. Demographic Research 36: 501-524.

Sundström, Marianne, 2017. Etableringsreformens första år, sid 33-43 i Arbetslivet och socialförsäkringen, Rapport från forskarseminariet i Umeå 13-14 januari 2016,

Tervola, Jussi, Ann-Zofie Duvander and Eleonora Mussino, 2017. Promoting Parental Leave for Immigrant Fathers—What Role Does Policy Play? Soc Polit 2017 jxx006. doi: 10.1093/sp/jxx006Socialförsäkringsrapport 2017:2.

Turunen, J. & Härkönen, J. Forthcoming. Parbildning och –upplösning. In Duvander, A-Z, & Turunen, J. (eds.) Demografi: Befolkningsperspektiv på samhället. Stockholm: Studentlitteratur.​

Vidal, Sergi, Francisco Perales, Philipp M. Lersch and Maria Brandén, 2017. Family migration in a cross-national perspective: The importance of institutional and cultural context. Demographic Research 36 - (10): 307-338.

Viklund, Ida and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2017. Time on leave, timin of preschool – The role of socio-economic background for preschool start in Sweden. In: Blossfeld, H-P., Kulic, N.m Skopek, J., and Triveni, M., Eds, Childcare, Early Education and Social Inequality: An International Perspective. Chapter 4. Forthcoming.

 

2016

Aarskaug Wiik, Kenneth and Eva Bernhardt, 2016. Gendered expectations: expected consequences of union formation across Europe. Journal of Family Studies.

Abramsson, M. and Andersson, E. K., 2016. Changing preferences with ageing - housing choices and housing plans of older people. Housing Theory and Society, 33(2):217-241.

Andersson, Eva K., and Bo Malmberg, 2016. Segregation and the effects of adolescent residential context on poverty risks and early income career: A study of the Swedish 1980 cohort. Urban Studies: 0042098016643915.

Andersson, G. and Drefahl, S., 2016. Long-distance migration and mortality in Sweden: Testing the salmon bias and healthy migrant hypotheses. Population, Space and Place. DOI: 10.1002/psp.2032
 

Andersson Joona, Pernilla, Lanninger, Alma Wennemo and Sundström, Marianne, 2016. Etableringsreformens effekter på de nyanländas integration. Slutrapport. SULCIS Rapport 2016:2, Stockholms universitet.

Bernhardt, Eva, Frances Goldscheider, and Jani Turunen, 2016. Attitudes to the gender division of labor and the transition to fatherhood. Are egalitarian men in Sweden more likely to remain childless? 59(3):269-284. Acta Sociologica, doi: 10.1177/0001699316645930.

Bihagen, E., and J. Härkönen. 2016. The direct and indirect effects of social background on occupational positions in Sweden: New evidence on old questions. In: Ballarino, G., and F. Bernardi Eds, Education, Occupation, and Social Origin: A Comparative Analysis of the Transmission of Socio-Economic Inequalities:182-198. Edward Elgar.

Björkenstam,Charlotte, Gunnar Andersson, Christina Dalman, Susan Cochran, and Kyriaki Kosidou, 2016. ”Suicide in married couples in Sweden: Is the risk greater in same-sex couples?” European Journal of Epidemiology 31(7): 685-690. DOI: 10.1007/s10654-016-0154-6.

Brandén, Maria, Ann-Zofie Duvander and Sofi Ohlsson-Wijk, 2016. Sharing the Caring: Attitude-Behavior Discrepancies and Partnership Dynamics. Journal of Family issues, 10.1177/0192513X16680013

Caporali, Arianna, Sebastian Klüsener, Gerda Neyer, Sandra Krapf and Olga Grigorieva, 2016. The Contextual Database of the Generations and Gender Programme: Concept, Content and Research Examples. Demographic Research 35 (9): 229-252.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, and Anne Lise Ellingsæter, 2016. Cash for childcare schemes in the Nordic welfare states: diverse paths, diverse outcomes. European Societies: 1-21.

Evertsson, Marie, 2016. Institutional context, family policies and women’s and men’s work outcomes in eight European welfare states, Chapter 2 in Grunow, D. and M. Evertsson, Eds., Couples’ Transitions to Parenthood: Analysing Gender and Work in Europe. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN: 978 1 78536 599 7

Evertsson, Marie, 2016. Parental leave and careers - Women and men's wages after parental leave in Sweden. Advances in Life Course Research, Online first (Feb. 2016): http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.alcr.2016.02.002

Evertsson, Marie and Katarina Boye. 2016. The gendered transition to parenthood: Lasting inequalities in the home and in the labour market, Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioural Sciences. An Interdisciplinary, Searchable, and Linkable Resource DOI: 10.1002/9781118900772.etrds0399

Evertsson, M. and Grunow, D., 2016. Narratives on the transition to parenthood in eight European countries. The importance of gender culture and welfare regime, Chapter 12 in Grunow, D. and M. Evertsson, Eds., Couples’ Transitions to Parenthood: Analysing Gender and Work in Europe. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN: 978 1 78536 599 7

Evertsson, Marie, Daniela Grunow and Silke Aisenbrey, 2016. Work Interruptions and Young Women’s Career Prospects in Germany, Sweden and the U.S. Work, Employment and Society 30: 291-308.

Fahlén, Susanne, 2016. Equality at home-A question of career? Housework, norms, and policies in a European comparative perspective. Demographic Research 35 (2016): 1411-1440.

Ferrarini, T., Nelson, K., and Palme, J., 2016. Social transfers and poverty in middle- and high-income countries – A global perspective. Global Social Policy 16(1): 22-46.

Grunow, D. and Evertsson, M., Eds., 2016. Couples’ Transitions to Parenthood: Analysing Gender and Work in Europe. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN: 978 1 78536 599 7

Härkönen, Juho, Anna Manzoni, and Erik Bihagen, 2016. Gender inequalities in occupational prestige across the working life: An analysis of the careers of West Germans and Swedes born from the 1920s to the 1970s. Advances in Life Course Research, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.alcr.2016.01.001.

Kaufman, G., Bernhardt, E. and Goldscheider, F., 2016. Enduring Egalitarianism? Family Transitions and Attitudes Toward Gender Equality in Sweden. Journal of Family Issues 1-21

Lagergren, J., Andersson, G., Bihagen, E., Drefahl, S., Feychting, M., Härkönen, J., Talback, M., and Ljung, R., 2016. Marital status, education and income in relation to risk of esophageal and gastric cancer by histological type and site. Cancer 122(2):207-12. DOI: 10.1002/cncr.29731

Lee, S., Duvander, A-Z., and Zarit, S. H., 2016. How can family policies reconcile fertility and women’s employment? Comparisons between South Korea and Sweden, Asian Journal of Women’s Studies. Online Advance Publication. doi: 10.1080/12259276.2016.1202027

Ma, Li, 2016. Female labour force participation and second birth rates in South Korea. Journal of Population Research: 1-23.

Mussino, Eleonora, and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2016. Use It or Save It? Migration Background and Parental Leave Uptake in Sweden. European Journal of Population: 1-22.

Neyer, G., Hoem, J. M., and Andersson, G., 2016. Education and childlessness: The influence of educational field and educational level on childlessness among Swedish and Austrian women born in 1955-59. In: Kreyenfeld, M., and Konietzka, D., Eds, Childlessness in Europe: Contexts, Causes and Consequences Doordrecht: Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-44667-7

Obućina, Ognjen, 2016. Partner Choice in Sweden Following a Failed Intermarriage, In: European Journal of Population, doi:10.​1007/​s10680-016-9377-1.

Qi, H., Helgertz, J., and Bengtsson, T., 2016. Do notional defined contribution schemes prolong working life? Evidence from the 1994 Swedish pension reform. The Journal Of The Economics Of Ageing, DOI:10.1016/j.jeoa.2016.11.001

Webster, N. and Haandrikman, K., 2016, Thai women in Sweden: Victims or participants? Social Sciences Asia 2(1), 13-29.

Wiik, K.A. and E.M. Bernhardt, 2016. Gendered expectations: Expected consequences of union formation across Europe, Journal of Family Studies

2015

Andersson, Eva K. and Bo Malmberg, 2015. Contextual effects on educational attainment in individualized, scalable neighborhoods; differences across gender and social class. Urban Studies, vol. 52 no. 12, pp. 2117-2133.

Andersson, Gunnar and Martin Kolk, 2015. “Trends in childbearing, marriage and divorce in Sweden: An update with data up to 2012”. Finnish Yearbook of Population Research 2015: 21-30.

Andersson, Gunnar, Ognjen Obućina, and Kirk Scott, 2015. “Marriage and divorce of immigrants and descendants of immigrants in Sweden”. Demographic Research 33(2): 31-64. DOI: 10.4054/DemRes.2015.33.2.

Boye, Katarina, 2015. Can you stay home today? Parents’ occupations, relative resources and division of care leave for sick children. Acta Sociologica, 58(4): 357-370.

Dahlberg, Johan, 2015. "Social Background and Becoming a Parent in Sweden: A Register-Based Study of the Effect of Social Background on Childbearing in Sweden". European Journal of Population 31(4): 417-444.

Eydal, Guðný Björk,  Ingólfur V. Gíslason, Tine Rostgaard, Berit Brandth, Ann-Zofie Duvander, Johanna Lammi-Taskula, 2015. Trends in parental leave in the Nordic countries: has the forward march of gender equality halted? Community, Work and Family 18(2): 167-181.

Fahlén, Susanne, 2016. Equality at home-A question of career? Housework, norms, and policies in a European comparative perspective. Demographic Research 35 (2016): 1411-1440.

Goldscheider, Frances, Eva Bernhardt and Trude Lappegård, 2015. The gender revolution: A framework for understanding changing family and demographic behavior. Population and Development Review 41.2: 207-239.

Halldén, Karin, and Juho Härkönen, 2015. Vertical and horizontal segregation at labor market entry in Sweden: Birth cohorts 1925-85. Pp. 184-202 in Blossfeld, Hans-Peter, Buchholz, Sandra, Skopek, Jan & Triventi, Moris (eds.) Gender, Education, and Employment: An International Comparison of School-to-Work Transitions. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.

Halldén Karin & Anders Stenberg (forthcoming). Ökar RUT-avdrag kvinnors arbetsmarknadsutbud? [Does tax subsidized domestic services increase women’s labor supply?] Ekonomisk Debatt.

Halldén, Karin, 2015. Taking training to task: Sex of the immediate supervisor and men’s and women’s time in initial on-the-job training, Work and Occupations, 42(1), 73-102.

Hoem, Jan M., 2015. Life Table. In: Wright, James D. (editor-in-chief). International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, 2nd edition, Vol 14. Oxford: Elsevier, pp. 89-92.

Härkönen, Juho, 2015. Divorce. In Scott, Robert A. and Kosslyn, Stephen M. (eds.) Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons.

Malmberg, Bo, 2015. Future forest trends: Can we build on demographically based forecasts? In E. Westholm, K. Beland Lindahl & F. Kraxner (Eds.), The Future Use of Nordic Forests: A Global Perspective (pp. 169).

Malmberg, Bo and  Eva K. Andersson, 2015). Multi-scalar residential context and recovery from illness: an analysis using Swedish register data. Health & Place 2015. Vol. 35, September 2015, pp. 19–27.

Mussino, Eleonora, et al., 2015. Motherhood of foreign women in Lombardy: Testing the effects of migration by citizenship. Demographic Research 33: 653-664.

Strömblad, Per, & Bo Malmberg, 2015. Ethnic segregation and xenophobic party preference: Exploring the influence of the presence of visible minorities on local electoral support for the Sweden Democrats. Journal of Urban Affairs.

Sinyavskaya, Oxana & Sunnee Billingsley, 2015. The Importance of Job Characteristics to Women’s Fertility Intentions and Behavior in Russia. Genus 71(1): 23-59.

2014

Abramsson, Marianne and Andersson, Eva K., 2014. Changing locations: Central or peripheral moves of seniors? Journal of Housing and the Built Environment. Published online before print http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10901-014-9427-0.

Almqvist, Anna-Lena and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2014. Changes in gender equality? Swedish fathers’ parental leave, division of childcare and housework. Journal of Family Studies 20(1): 19–27.

Andersson, Gunnar, Michaela Kreyenfeld, and Tatjana Mika, 2014. “Welfare state context, female labor-market attachment and childbearing in Germany and Denmark”. Journal of Population Research 31(4): 287-316. DOI: 10.1007/s12546-014-9135-3.

Kreyenfeld, Michaela and Gunnar Andersson, 2014. “Socioeconomic differences in the unemployment and fertility nexus: Evidence from Denmark and Germany“. Advances in Life Course Research 21: 59-73. DOI: 10.1016/j.alcr.2014.01.007.

Andersson, Eva K. and Bo Malmberg, 2014. Contextual effects on educational attainment in individualized, scalable neighborhoods; differences across gender and social class. Urban Studies doi: 10.1177/0042098014542487.

Andersson, Eva K., 2014. Rural Housing Market Hotspots and Footloose In-migrants. Journal of Housing and the Built Environment vol 30, no. 1, pp. 17-37.

Bihagen, Erik and Juho Härkönen, 2014. Könsskillnader i karriärer: utveckling för kvinnor och män födda 1925 till 1981. Pp. 212-234 in Evertsson, Marie and Magnusson, Charlotta (eds.) Ojämlikhetens dimensioner: uppväxtvillkor, arbete och hälsa i Sverige. Stockholm: Libera.

Billingsley, Sunnee, & Tommy Ferrarini, 2014. Family Policy and Fertility Intentions in 21 European Countries. Journal of Marriage and Family, 76(2): 428-445.

Billingsley, Sunnee, Luule Sakkeus & Allan Puur, 2014. Jobs, Careers, and Becoming a Parent under State Socialist and Free Market Conditions. Demographic Research, 30(64): 1733-1768.

Brandén, Maria, 2014. Gender, Gender Ideology, and Couples’ Migration Decisions. Journal of Family Issues 35.7: 950-971.

Brandén, Maria, 2014. Gendered Migration Patterns within a Sex Segregated Labor Market. Stockholm University Demography Unit – Dissertation Series, No 10.

Boye, Katarina, 2014. Mot ett nytt föräldraskap. In Grönlund, A. (ed.) Glimtar av jämställdhet. Umeå: Boréa förlag.

Boye, Katarina & Marie Evertsson, 2014. Vem gör vad när?  Kvinnors och mäns tid i betalt och obetalt arbete. In Marie Evertsson & Charlotta Magnusson (eds.) Ojämlikhetens dimensioner. Uppväxtvillkor, arbete och hälsa i Sverige. Stockholm: Liber.

Boye, Katarina, Karin Halldén & Charlotta Magnusson, 2014. Könslönegapets utveckling. Betydelsen av yrkets kvalifikationsnivå och familjeansvar. In Marie Evertsson & Charlotta Magnusson (eds.) Ojämlikhetens dimensioner. Uppväxtvillkor, arbete och hälsa i Sverige. Stockholm: Liber.

Boye, Katarina, 2014. Hushållsarbetets fördelning. In Boye, K. and Nermo, M. Lönsamt arbete – familjeansvarets fördelning och konsekvenser. SOU 2014:28. Stockholm: Fritzes.

Brandén, Maria, 2014. Gendered Migration Patterns within a Sex Segregated Labor Market. Stockholm University Demography Unit – Dissertation Series, No 10.

Brandén, Maria, 2014. Gender, Gender Ideology, and Couples’ Migration Decisions." Journal of Family Issues 35.7: 950-971.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, 2014. How Long Should Parental Leave Be? Attitudes to Gender Equality, Family, and Work as Determinants of Women’s and Men’s Parental Leave in Sweden. Journal of Family Issues 35 (7): 909 - 926.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie and Ida Viklund, 2014. ”Kvinnors och mäns föräldraledighet” pp 23-61 in Katarina Boye and Magnus Nermo (Eds). SOU 2014:28 Lönsamt arbete – familjeansvarets fördelning och konsekvenser.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie and Mats Johansson, 2014. “Parental leave use for different fathers. A study of the impact of three Swedish parental leave reforms” in Rostgard, T. and Eydal, G. (Eds) Fatherhood in the Nordic Welfare States - Comparing Care Policies and Practice’. Forthcoming in Policy Press 2014.

Enström Öst, Cecilia, 2014. Economic incentives, housing allowance, and housing consumption: An unintended consequence of a shift in housing policy. Journal of Housing Economics, 23:17-27.

Enström Öst, Cecilia, Bo Söderberg & Mats Wilhelmsson, 2014. Household allocation and spatial distribution in a market under (“soft”) rent control. Journal of Policy Modeling, 36(2):353-372.

Erola, Jani and Juho Härkönen, 2014. Lastensaannin vaikutus hyvinvointiin Euroopassa. Pp. 78-99 in Niemelä, Mikko (ed.) Eurooppalaiset elinolot. Helsinki: Kansaneläkelaitos.

Fahlén, Susanne, 2014. Does Gender Matter? Policies, Norms and the Gender Gap in Work-to-Home and Home-to-Work Conflict across Europe. Community, Work & Family, 17(4): 371-391.

Halldén, Karin, 2014. Könssegregering efter yrke på den svenska arbetsmarknaden år 2000–2010 [Occupational sex segregation in the Swedish labour market 2000-2010 ]. In A. Kunze & K. Thorburn (eds.) Yrke, karriär och lön– kvinnors och mäns olika villkor på den svenska arbetsmarknaden [Occupation, career and wages – differences between women and men in the Swedish labour market], Forskningsantologi till Delegationen för jämställdhet i arbetslivet, SOU 2014:81, Stockholm: Fritzes.

Halldén, Karin & Anders Stenberg, 2014. The relationship between hours of domestic services and female earnings: Panel register data evidence from a reform. IZA Discussion Paper No. 8675. Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA).

Halldén, Karin & Anders Stenberg, (2014). Rengöring, Underhåll och Tvätt: Betydelsen av RUT-avdrag för kvinnors arbetsmarknadsutbud [Cleaning, cooking and doing laundry: The implication of subsidized domestic services for women’s labour supply]. In K. Boye & M. Nermo (eds.) Lönsamt arbete: Familjeansvarets fördelning och konsekvenser [Profitable work: The division of family responsibilities and its consequences], Forskningsantologi till Delegationen för jämställdhet i arbetslivet, SOU 2014:28, Stockholm: Fritzes.

Halldén, Karin, Jenny Säve-Söderbergh & Åsa Rosén, 2014. Immediate manager gender and wages of female employees: The importance of manager position. Working paper available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2449323 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2449323

Haandrikman, Karen, 2014. Binational marriages in Sweden: Is there an EU effect? Population, Space and Place, 20(2): 177-199.

Hedberg, Charlotta and Karen Haandrikman, 2014. Repopulation of the Swedish countryside: Globalisation by international migration. Journal of Rural Studies, 34: 128-138.

Härkönen, Juho, 2014. Työn monet muodot. Pp. 95-109 in Erola, Jani & Räsänen, Pekka. Johdatus sosiologian perusteisiin. Helsinki: Gaudeamus.

Härkönen, Juho, 2014. Divorce: Trends, Patterns, Causes, Consequences, in: Treas, Judith, Jacqueline Scott and Martin Richards (Eds), The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to the Sociology of Families. Wiley-Blackwell.

Härkönen, Juho, 2014. Birth Order Effects on Educational Attainment and Educational Transitions in West Germany. European Sociological Review 30(2): 166–179.

Lariccia, Francesca, Eleonora Mussino, Antonella Pinnelli e Sabrina Prati, 2014. Differenze negli esiti perinatali in Italia: il ruolo della cittadinanza. In: Stranieri in Italia: Figli, lavoro, vita quotidiana (a cura di A. Colombo). Collana Ricerche e studi dell'Istituto Carlo Cattaneo.

Ma, Li, 2015. Economic crisis and women's labor force return after childbirth: Evidence from South Korea. Demographic Research 31 (2014): 511-551.

Malmberg, Bo, Eva K. Andersson and Zara Bergsten, 2014. Composite geographical context and school choice attitudes in Sweden: A study based on individually defined, scalable neighborhoods. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, vol. 104 no. 4, pp. 869-888.

Manzoni, Anna, Juho Härkönen and Karl Ulrich Mayer, 2014. Moving on? A growth-curve analysis of occupational attainment and career progression patterns in West Germany. Social Forces 92(4): 1285-1312.

Mussino, Eleonora, Salvatore Strozza and Laura Terzera, 2014. Il ruolo delle variabili individuali e delle realtà d’insediamento nell’integrazione degli immigrati, In Donadio P., Gabrielli G., Massari M. (a cura), Uno come te. Europei e nuovi europei nei percorsi di integrazione, FrancoAngeli-Ismu, Milano.

Nielsen, Michael M., Marco Heurich, Bo Malmberg, & Anders Brun, 2014. Automatic mapping of standing dead trees after an insect outbreak using the Window Independent Context Segmentation method. Journal of forestry, 112(6), 564-571.

Ohlsson-Wijk, Sofi, 2014. Digit Preferences in Marriage Formation in Sweden: Millennium Marriages and Birthday Peaks. Demographic Research 30(25): 421-432.

Oláh, Livia Sz. and Michael Gähler, 2014. Gender Equality Perceptions, Division of Paid and Unpaid Work, and Partnership Dissolution in Sweden. Social Forces, 93 (2): 571-594.

Östh, John, Bo Malmberg and Eva K. Andersson, 2014. Analysing segregation with individualized neighbourhoods defined by population size, in C. D. LLOYD, I. SHUTTLEWORTH and D. WONG (Ed.) Social-Spatial Segregation: Concepts, Processes and Outcomes, Ch. 7, pp. 135-161. Policy Press.

Östh, John, William A. Clark, & Bo Malmberg, 2014. Measuring the Scale of Segregation Using k‐Nearest Neighbor Aggregates. Geographical Analysis.

Thomson, Elizabeth, 2014. Family Complexity in Europe. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 654: 245-258.

Thomson, Elizabeth, Trude Lappegård, Marcia Carlson, Ann Evans and Edith Gray, 2014. Childbearing across partnerships in Australia, the United States, Norway, and Sweden. Demography 51(2):  485-508.

 

2013

Andersson, Gunnar, and Boris Sobolev, 2013. Small effects of selective migration and selective survival in retrospective studies of fertility. European Journal of Population 29(3): 345-354.

Bernhardt, Eva, Turid Noack, and Kenneth Wiik, 2013. Cohabitation or Marriage? Contemporary Living Arrangements in the West. Chapter 2 in Contemporary Issues in Family Studies: Global Perspectives on Partnerships, Parenting and Support in a Changing World. Wiley-Blackwell, forthcoming.

Bihagen, Erik, and Juho Härkönen, 2013. Kommer kvinnor ikapp? Karriärer för män och kvinnor födda från 1925 till 1984 [Are women catching up? Occupational careers of men and women born 1925-84]. In: Evertsson, M., and Magnusson, C. (Eds.), Ojämlikhetens dimensioner. Stockholm: Liber. Forthcoming.

Brandén, Maria, 2013. Couples’ education and regional mobility – the importance of occupation, income and gender. Population, Space and Place 19(5): 522-536.

Cooke, Lynn Prince, Jani Erola, Marie Evertsson, Michael Gähler, Juho Härkönen, Belinda Hewitt, Marika Jalovaara, Man-Yee Kan, Torkil Hovde Lyngstad, Letizia Mencarini, Jean-Francois Mignot,  Dimitri Mortelmans, Anne-Rigt Poortman, Christian Schmitt, and Heike Trappe, 2013. Labor and love. Wives’ employment and divorce risk in its socio-political context. Social Politics 20(4): 482-509.

Dahlin, Johanna, and Juho Härkönen, 2013. Cross-national differences in the gender gap in subjective health in Europe: Does country level gender equality matter? Social Science and Medicine 98: 24-28.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, 2013. Är den svenska föräldraledigheten för flexibel? In: Brandth, B., and Kvander, E. (Eds.), Den farsvennlige velferdstaten. Universitetsforlaget, Norway. Forthcoming.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie and Tommy Ferrarini, 2013. Sweden’s family policy under change: past, present, future. International Policy analysis. Friedrich Ebert Stiftung.

Erola, Jani, and Juho Härkönen, 2013. Lastensaannin vaikutus hyvinvointiin Euroopassa [The effects of childbearing on well-being in Europe]. In: Niemelä, M. (Ed.), Eurooppalaiset elinolot ja elämänvaiheet. Helsinki: Kela. Forthcoming.

Evertsson, Marie, 2013. The importance of work: Changing work commitment following the transition to motherhood. Acta Sociologica 56(2): 139-153.

Fahlén, Susanne, 2013. The agency gap: Policies, norms and working time capabilities across welfare stated. In: Hobson, B. (Ed.), The Agency and Capabilities Gap in Work–Life Balance: Across European and Asian Societies and within Work Organizations. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Fahlén, Susanne, 2013. Capabilities and childbearing intentions in Europe: The association between reconciliation policies, economic uncertainties and women’s fertility. European Societies 15(5): 639-662.

Fahlén, Susanne, and Livia Sz. Oláh, 2013. Work and childbearing intentions in a capability perspective: Young adult women in Sweden. In:  Oláh, L. Sz., and Fratczak, E. (Eds.), Childbearing, Women’s Employment and Work-Life Balance Policies in Contemporary Europe. Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

Ferrarini, Tommy, Kenneth Nelson, Walter Korpi, and Joakim Palme, 2013. Social citizenship rights and social insurance replacement rate validity: pitfalls and possibilities. Journal of European Public Policy, forthcoming.

Fortini, Marco, Luca Mancini, Luigi Marcone, Eleonora Mussino and Evelina Paluzzi, 2013. Chi si stabilisce in Italia? transizione verso la residenza degli immigrati extracomunitari Rivista Italiana di Economia, Demografia e Statistica- Volume LXVII n. 3/4 Luglio-Dicembre 2013.

Goldscheider, Frances, Eva Bernhardt, and Maria Brandén, 2013. Domestic gender equality and childbearing in Sweden. Demographic Research 29: 1097-1126.

Golsteyn, Bart H.H., Hans Grönqvist, and Lena Lindahl, 2013. Time preferences and lifetime outcomes. Economic Journal, DOI: 10.1111/ecoj.12095.

Grönqvist, Hans, and Caroline Hall, 2013. Education policy and early fertility: Lessons from an expansion of upper secondary schooling. Economics of Education Review 37: 13-33.

Haandrikman, Karen, 2013. Book review of Charsley (2012), “Transnational marriage. New perspectives from Europe and Beyond”. Nordic Journal of Migration Research, 3(4), 234-235.

Halldén, Karin, 2013. Könsskillnader i akademiska karriärer i Sverige – en forskningsöversikt [Gender differences in academic careers in Sweden - a research survey]. Rapport till Delegationen för Jämställdhet i Högskolan [Report to the Delegation for Gender Equality in Higher Education], June 2013.

Halldén, Karin, 2013. Vad vet vi om visstidsanställning? En forskningsöversikt avseende effekter av tidsbegränsad anställning i Sverige år 1995-2010 [What do we know about temporary employment? A research survey on the effects of temporary employment in Sweden 1995-2010]. Report for Tjänstemännens Centralorganisation (TCO) [The Swedish Confederation for Professional Employees], September 2013.

Hobson, Barbara, Susanne Fahlén, and Judit Takács, 2013. A sense of entitlement? Agency and capabilities in Sweden and Hungary. In: Hobson, B. (Ed.), The Agency and Capabilities Gap in Work–Life Balance:  Across European and Asian Societies and within Work Organizations. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Hoem, Jan M., 2013. The dangers of conditioning on the time of occurrence of one demographic process in the analysis of another. Population Studies, DOI: 10.1080/00324728.2013. 843019. Also available as Stockholm Research Report in Demography 2012:12.

Hoem, Jan M., Cornelia Muresan, and Mihaela Haragus, 2013. Recent features of cohabitational and marital fertility in Romania. Population, 2013-4, forthcoming. Also available as Stockholm Research Report in Demography 2012:11.

Hoem, Jan M., Marika Jalovaara, and Cornelia Mureşan, 2013. Recent fertility patterns of Finnish women by union status: A descriptive account. Demographic Research 28(14): 409-420.

Härkönen, Juho, 2013. Divorce: Trends, causes, and consequences. In: Treas, J. K., Scott, J., and Richards, M. (Eds.), The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to the Sociology of Families. Chichester: John Wiley. Forthcoming. Also available as Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2013:7.

Härkönen, Juho, 2013. Divorce. In: Scott, R. A., and Kosslyn, S. M. (Eds.), Emerging Trends in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. London: Sage. Forthcoming.

Härkönen, Juho, 2013. Birth order effects on educational attainment and educational transitions in West Germany. European Sociological Review, DOI: 10.1093/esr/jct027.

Klüsener, Sebastian, Brienna Perelli-Harris, and Nora Sánchez Gassen, 2013. Spatial aspects of the rise of nonmarital fertility across Europe since 1960: the role of states and regions in shaping patterns of change. European Journal of Population 29(2): 137-165.

Korpi, Walter, Tommy Ferrarini, and Stefan Englund, 2013. Women’s opportunities under different family policy constellations: Gender, class and inequality tradeoffs in Western countries re-examined. Social Politics 20(1): 1-40.

Lariccia, Francesca, Eleonora Mussino, Antonella Pinnelli and Sabrina Prati, 2013. Antenatal care in Italy: Differences between Italian and Foreign Women. GENUS Vol 69, No 2.

Lappegård, Trude, Ann-Zofie Duvander, and Gunnar Andersson, 2013. Har foreldrepermisjon betydning for barnefødsler? In: Brandth, B., and Kvande, E. (Eds.), Fedrekvoten og den farsvennlige velferdsstaten: 211-221. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. ISBN 978-82-15-02189-8.

Lappegård, Trude, and Marit Rønsen, 2013. Socioeconomic differentials in multi-partner fertility among fathers. Demography 50(3): 1135-1153.

Ma, Li, 2013. Employment and motherhood entry in South Korea, 1978-2006. Population 68(3): 419-446.

Malmberg, Bo, Eva Andersson, and Johan Östh, 2013. Segregation and urban unrest in Sweden. Urban Geography 34(7): 1031-1046.

Malmberg, Bo, Eva Andersson, and Zara Bergsten, 2013. School choice motives: the effects of class and residential context. Annals of the Association for American Geographers, forthcoming.

Mussino, Eleonora and Alyson Van Raalte, 2013. Immigrant Fertility: A Comparative Study between Italy and Russia. International Migration vol 51-2 pag 148-164.

Neyer, Gerda, Gunnar Andersson, Hill Kulu, Laura Bernardi, and Christoph Bühler (Eds), 2013. The Demography of Europe, 226 p. Doordrecht: Springer: ISBN 978-90-481-8977-9.

Neyer, Gerda, Gunnar Andersson, and Hill Kulu, 2013. The demography of Europe: Introduction. In: Neyer, G., et al. (Eds), The Demography of Europe: 1-13. Doordrecht: Springer.

Neyer, Gerda, 2013. Welfare states, family policies and fertility in Europe. In: Neyer, G., et al., (Eds.), The Demography of Europe: 29-54. Doordrecht: Springer.

Neyer, Gerda, Trude Lappegård, and Daniele Vignoli, 2013. Gender equality and fertility: Which equality matters? European Journal of Population 29(3): 245-272.

Neyer, Gerda, Jan Hoem, and Gunnar Andersson, 2013. Kinderlosigkeit, Bildungsrichtung und Bildungsniveau. Ergebnisse einer Untersuchung schwedischer und österreichischer Frauen der Geburtenjahrgänge 1955-59. In: Konietzka, D., and Kreyenfeld, M. (Eds.), Ein Leben ohne Kinder – Kinderlosigkeit in Deutschland, 2nd Edition: 101-135. Wiesbaden: Springer VS. ISBN 978-3-531-18355-8 (Print); DOI 10.1007/978-3-531-94149-3 (Online).

Obucina, Ognjen, 2013. Paths into and out of poverty among immigrants in Sweden. Acta Sociologica, DOI: 10.1177/0001699313495055.

Obucina, Ognjen, 2013. Occupational trajectories and occupational cost among Senegalese immigrants in Europe. Demographic Research 28(19): 557-580.

Obucina, Ognjen, 2013. The patterns of satisfaction among immigrants in Germany. Social Indicators Research 113: 1105-1127.

Oláh, Livia Sz., and Ewa Fratczak (Eds.), 2013. Childbearing, Women's Employment and Work-Life Balance Policies in Contemporary Europe. Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

Oláh, Livia Sz., and Susanne Fahlén, 2013. Introduction: Aspirations and uncertainties. Childbearing choices and work-life realities in Europe. In: Oláh, L. Sz., and Fratczak, E. (Eds.), Childbearing, Women’s Employment and Work-Life Balance Policies in Contemporary Europe. Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

Oláh, Livia Sz., and Susanne Fahlén, 2013. Concluding thoughts on childbearing, women’s work and work-life balance policy nexus in Europe in the dawn of 21st century. In: Oláh, L. Sz., and Fratczak, E. (Eds.), Childbearing, Women’s Employment and Work-Life Balance Policies in Contemporary Europe. Basingstoke, Hampshire, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.

Östh, John, Eva Andersson, & Bo Malmberg, 2013. School Choice and Increasing Performance Difference: A Counterfactual Approach. Urban Studies, 50(2), 407-425. doi: 10.1177/0042098012452322.

Scott, Kirk, and Maria Stanfors, 2013. Intergenerational transmission of young motherhood. Evidence from Sweden, 1986 – 2009. The History of the Family. Forthcoming.

Sjöberg, Ola, 2013. A flexicurity model goes south? The politics of flexicurity in Sweden. In: Clegg, D., Graziano, P. R., and Jessoula, M. (Eds.) The Politics of Flexicurity in Europe: Labour Market Reform in Hostile Climes and Tough Times. Basingstoke: Palgrave. Forthcoming.

Thalberg, Sara, 2013. Students and Family Formation. Studies on Educational Enrolment and Childbearing in Sweden. Stockholm University Demography Unit – Dissertation Series, No 9.

Thomson, Elizabeth, Trude Lappegård, Marcia Carlson, Ann Evans and Edith Gray, 2013. Childbearing across partnerships in Australia, the United States, Norway and Sweden. Demography, forthcoming.

Thomson, Elizabeth, and Helen Eriksson, 2013. Register-based estimates of parental separation in Sweden. Demographic Research, forthcoming.

Vignoli, Daniele, Francesca Rinesi and Eleonora Mussino, 2013. A home to plan a child?  Fertility intentions and housing conditions in Italy. Population, Space and Place Volume 19, Issue 1, pages 60–71.

Wesolowski, Katharina, 2013. To have or not to have a child? Perceived constraints on childbearing in a lowest-low fertility context. Population, Space and Place, DOI: 10.1002/psp.1811.

Östh, John, Eva Andersson, and Bo Malmberg, 2013. School choice and increasing performance difference: A counterfactual approach. Urban Studies 50(2): 407-425.

 

2012

Andersson, Eva, Bo Malmberg, and John Östh, 2012. Travel-to-school distances in Sweden 2000-2006 - changing school geography with equality implications. Journal of Transport Geography, Special Issue on Time Geography 23: 35–43.

Alsarve, Jenny, and Katarina Boye, 2012. Inte bara jämställdhet. Beslutet om föräldraledighet, moderskaps- och faderskapsideal och idéer om barns bästa. Sociologisk Forskning 49(2): 103-128.

Bertram, Hans, Marten Bujard, Gerda Neyer, Ilona Ostner, and Katharina Spiess, 2012. Familienpolitik für Kinder und Eltern. In: Stock, G. et al. (Eds.), Zukunft mit Kindern. Fertilität und gesellschaftliche Entwicklung in Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz: 198-293. Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, and Mats Johansson, 2012.What are the effects of reforms promoting fathers’ parental leave use? Journal of Europan Social Policy 22(3): 319-330.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie and Sten Olsson, 2012. “Nyanlända invandrares användning av föräldrapenning” [Newly arrived immigrants use of parental leave] In Förmån och fälla – nyanländas uttag av föräldrapenning SOU 2012:9. Stockholm: Fritzes.

Enström Öst, Cecilia, 2012. Housing and children: simultaneous decisions? – A cohort study of young adults' housing and family formation decision. Journal of Population Economics 25(1): 349-366.

Enström Öst, Cecilia, 2012. Parental wealth and first-time homeownership - A cohort study of family background and young adults' housing situation. Urban Studies 49(10): 2137-2152.

Evertsson, Marie, 2012. Family, kinship and state in contemporary Europe. Vol. 1: The Century of Welfare: Eight Countries, by Granditis (Ed.) (2010). Contemporary Sociology A Journal of Reviews 41: 28-30.

Evertsson, Marie, and Daniela Grunow, 2012. Women’s work interruptions and career prospects in Germany and Sweden. Special issue on welfare state regulations and mothers’ labour market participation in an internationally comparative perspective. International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 32: 561-575.

Ferrarini, Tommy, Kenneth Nelson, and Helena Höög, 2012. From universalism to selectivity. Old wine in new bottles for child benefits. In: Marx, I, and Nelson, K. (Eds.), Minimum Income Protection in Flux. HoundMills: Palgrave MacMillan.

Ferrarini, Tommy, Kenneth Nelson, Joakim Palme, and Ola Sjöberg, 2012. Sveriges socialförsäkringar i jämförande perspektiv: En institutionell analys av sjuk-, arbetsskade- och arbetslöshetsförsäkringarna i 18 OECD-länder 1930 till 2010. [”Social Insurance in Sweden in Comparative Perspective. An Institutional Analysis of Sickness-, Work Accident- and Unemployment Insurance in 18 OECD countries 1930-2010”]. Report for the Swedish Parliamentary Social Insurance Committee. Stockholm: Elanders.

Grönqvist, Hans, Per Johansson, and Susan Niknami, 2012. Income inequality and health: Lessons from a refugee residential assignment program. Journal of Health Economics 31(4): 617-629.

Halldén, Karin, Duncan Gallie, and Ying Zhou, 2012. The skills and autonomy of female part-time work in Britain and Sweden. Research in Social Stratification and Mobility (RSSM) 30(2): 187-201.

Hobson, Barbara, and Susanne Fahlén, 2012. Father's capabilities for care: A European perspective. In: Bertram, H., and Elhart, N. (Eds.) Family, Ties and Care: Family Transformation in Plural Modernity. Berlin: Barbara Budrich. (Also translated into German: Familie, Bundungen und Fursorge: Familiärer Wadel in einer veilfätltigen Moderne.)

Kaufman, Gayle, and Eva Bernhardt, 2012. His and her job: What matters most for fertility plans and actual childbearing? Family Relations 61: 686-697.

Kitterød, Ragni Hege, and Trude Lappegård, 2012. A typology of work-family arrangements among dual-earner couples’ in Norway. Family Relations 61: 671-685.

Kreyenfeld, Michaela, Gunnar Andersson, and Ariane Pailhé, 2012. Economic uncertainty and family dynamics in Europe. Edited Special Collection 12 of Demographic Research. Available at http://www.demographic-research.org/special/12.

Lappegård, Trude, 2012. Couples' parental leave practices: Workplace situations. Journal of Family and Economic Issues 33(2): 298-305.

Lindh, Thomas, and Bo Malmberg, 2012. Demographic perspectives in housing. In: Smith, S. J. (Ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Housing and Home. Elsevier.

Lundström, Karin E. and Gunnar Andersson, 2012. Labor-market status, migrant status and first childbearing in Sweden. Demographic Research 27(25): 719-742.

Mahon, Rianne, Anneli Anttonen, Christina Bergqvist, Deborah Brennan, and Barbara Hobson, 2012. Convergent care regimes? Childcare arrangements in Australia, Canada, Finland and Sweden. Journal of European Social Policy 22(4): 419-431.

Malmberg, Bo, 2012. Fertility cycles, age structure and housing demand. Scottish Journal of Political Economy 59(5): 467-482.

Malmberg, Bo, Eva Andersson, and John Östh, 2012. Analysing segregation with individualized neighbourhoods defined by population size. In: Lloyd, C. D., Shuttleworth, I., and Wong, D. (Eds.), Social-Spatial Segregation: Concepts, Processes and Outcomes, Policy Press. Forthcoming.

Marten, Carina, Gerda Neyer, and Ilona Ostner, 2012. Neue Risiken, neue Politiken – Familienpolitischer Wandel in Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz. Soziale Welt 19: 115-137.

Perelli-Harris, Brienna, Michaela Kreyenfeld, Wendy Sigle-Rushton, Renske Keizer, Trude Lappegard, Aiva Jasilioniene, Caroline Berghammer, and Paola Di Giulio, 2012. Changes in union status during the transition to parenthood: An examination of 11 European countries. Population Studies 66(2): 167-182.

Sjöberg, Ola, 2012. Sweden: ambivalent adjustment. In: Clasen, J. and Clegg, D. (Eds.), Regulating the Risk of Unemployment: National Adaptations to Post-Industrial Labour Markets in Europe: 208-231. Oxford University Press.

Tesching, Karin, 2012. Education and Fertility. Dynamic Interrelations between Women’s Educational Level, Educational Field and Fertility in Sweden. Stockholm University Demography Unit – Dissertation Series, No 6.

Thomson, Elizabeth, Maria Winkler-Dvorak, Martin Spielauer, and Alexia Prskawtz, 2012. Union stability as an engine of fertility? A micro-simulation model for France. Demography 49(1): 175-195.

Thomson, Elizabeth, Maria Winkler-Dvorak, and Sheela Kennedy, 2012. The standard family life course: An assessment of variability in life course pathways. In: Evans, A. and Baxter, J. (Eds.), Negotiating the Life Course: Stability and Change in Life Pathways. Springer.

Thomson, Elizabeth, and Sara S. McLanahan, 2012. Reflections on “Family Structure and Child Well-Being: Economic Resources vs. Parental Socialization”. Social Forces 91(1): 45-53.

Vignoli, Daniele, Sven Drefahl, and Gustavo De Santis, 2012. Whose job instability affects the likelihood of becoming a parent in Italy? A tale of two partners. Demographic Research 26(2): 41-62.

Wiik, Kenneth Aarskaug, Renske Keizer, and Trude Lappegård, 2012. Relationship quality in marital and cohabiting unions across Europe. Journal of Marriage and the Family 74: 389-398.

 

2011

Andersson, Gunnar, 2011. Family policies and fertility in Sweden. In: Takayama, N., and Werding, M. (Eds.), Fertility and Public Policy: How to Reverse the Trend of Declining Birth Rates: 203-218. Cambridge MA and London: MIT-Press.

Andersson, Gunnar, and Martin Kolk, 2011. Trends in childbearing and nuptiality in Sweden: An update with data up to 2007. Finnish Yearbook of Population Research 2011: 21-29.

Billingsley, Sunnee, 2011. Second and third births in Armenia and Moldova: An economic perspective of recent behaviour and current preferences. European Journal of Population 27(2): 125-155.

Billingsley, Sunnee, 2011. Exploring the conditions for a mortality crisis: Bringing context back into the debate. Population, Space and Place 17(3): 267-289.

Billingsley, Sunnee, 2011. Economic crisis and recovery: Changes in second birth rates within occupational classes and educational groups. Demographic Research 24(16): 375-406.

Boye, Katarina, 2011. Work and well-being in a comparative perspective – the role of family policy. European Sociological Review 27(1): 16-30.

Bygren, Magnus, Ann-Zofie Duvander, and Tommy Ferrarini, 2011. Moulding parents’ childcare?: A comparative analysis of paid work and time with children in different family policy models. In: Drobnic, S. and Guillén, A. (Eds.), Work-Life Balance in Europe: The Role of Job Quality: 207-230. Palgrave Macmillan.

Eriksson, Helen, 2011. The gendering effects of Sweden’s gender-neutral care leave policy. Population Review 50(1): 156-169.

Evertsson, Marie, and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2011. Parental leave - possibility or trap? Does family leave length affect Swedish women's labor market opportunities? European Sociological Review 27: 1-16.

Goldscheider, Frances, Calvin Goldscheider, and Eva Bernhardt, 2011. Creating egalitarian families among the adult children of Turkish and Polish-origin immigrants in Sweden. International Migration Review 45(1): 68-88.

Grunow, Daniela, Silke Aisenbrey, and Marie Evertsson, 2011. Familienpolitik, Bildung und Berufskarrieren von Müttern in Deutschland, USA und Schweden (Motherhood, family policy, education, and careers in Germany, the US, and Sweden). Kölner Zeitschrift für Soziologie und Sozialpsychologie 63: 395-430.

Halldén, Karin, 2011. What's sex got to do with it? Women and men in European labour markets. Swedish Institute for Social Research Dissertation Series no. 85. Department of Sociology. Stockholm University.

Hobson, Barbara, and Susanne Fahlén, 2011. Father’s capabilities for care: An european erspective. In: Bertram, H., and Ehlert, N. (Eds.), Family, Ties, and Care: Family Transformation in a Plural Modernity: 99-115. Opladen: Verlag Barbara Budrich.

Hobson, Barbara, and Susanne Fahlén, 2011. Parent’s work-life balance: Beyond responsibilities and obligations to agency and capabilities. In: Bridgeman, J., Keating, H., and Lind, C. (Eds.), Regulating Family Responsibilities: 21-46. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing Limited.

Hobson, Barbara, Fahlén, Susanne and Judit Takács, 2011. Agency and capabilities to achieve a work–life balance: A Comparison of Sweden and Hungary. Social Politics 18(2): 168-198.

Hoem, Jan M., and Cornelia Mureşan, 2011. The total marital fertility rate and its extensions. European Journal of Population 27(3): 295-213.

Hoem, Jan and Cornelia Mureşan, 2011. An extension of the conventional TFR: Une extension de l'indicateur conjoncturel de fécondité. European Journal of Population 27(4): 389-401.

Holland, Jennifer, and Elizabeth Thomson, 2011. Stepfamily childbearing in Sweden: Quantum and tempo effects, 1950-99. Population Studies 65(1): 115-128.

Härkönen, Juho, 2011. Children and dual worklessness in Europe: A comparison of nine countries. European Journal of Population 27(2): 217-241.

Härkönen, Juho, and Erik Bihagen, 2011. Occupational attainment and career progression in Sweden. European Societies: The Official Journal of the European Sociological Association 13(3): 451-479.

Härkönen, Juho , Pekka Räsänen, and Matti Näsi, 2011. Obesity, unemployment, and earnings. Nordic Journal of Working Life Studies 1(2): 23-38.

Korpi, Martin, William A.V. Clark, and Bo Malmberg, 2011. The urban hierarchy and domestic migration: the interaction of internal migration, disposable income and the cost of living, Sweden 1993-2002. Journal of Economic Geography 11(6): 1051-1077.

Lappegård, Trude, 2011. The “Columbus’ egg” of Norwegian family policy. Demográfia - English Edition 54(5): 79-88.

Malmberg, Bo, 2011. The rural population: Agriculture, birth-rates, and demographic transition. In: Antonson, H. and U. Jansson, Eds, Agriculture and forestry in Sweden since 1900: Geographical and historical studie: 109-122. Royal Swedish Academy of Agriculture and Forestry: Stockholm.

Neyer, Gerda, and Laura Bernardi, 2011. Feminist perspectives on motherhood and reproduction. Historical Social Research / Historische Sozialforschung 36(2): 162-176.

Neyer, Gerda, 2011. Should governments in Europe be more aggressive in pushing for gender equality to raise fertility? The second "NO". Demographic Research 24(10): 225-250.

Ohlsson-Wijk, Sofi, 2011. Sweden's marriage revival: An analysis of the new-millennium switch from long-term decline to increasing popularity. Population Studies 65(2): 183-200.

Oláh, Livia Sz., 2011. Should governments in Europe be more aggressive in pushing for gender equality to raise fertility? The second "YES". Demographic Research 24(9): 217-224.

Oláh, Livia Sz., 2011. Family policies and birth rates: Childbearing, female work, and the time policy of early childhood education in postwar Europe. In: Hagemann, K., Jarausch, K. and Allemann-Ghionda, C. (Eds.), Children, Families, and States: Time Policies of Childcare, Preschool, and Primary Education in Europe: 113-131. New York and Oxford: Beghahn Books.

Rijken, Arieke, and Elizabeth Thomson, 2011. Partners’ relationship quality and childbearing. Social Science Research 40(2): 485-497.

Thalberg, Sara, 2011. Does money matter? Childbearing behaviour of Swedish students in the 1980’s and 1990’s. Finnish Yearbook of Population Research 2011: 5-19.

 

2010

Andersson, Gunnar, and Turid Noack, 2010. Legal advances and demographic developments of same-sex unions in Scandinavia. Zeitschrift für Familienforschung / Journal of Family Research 22 Sonderheft 2010: 87-101.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2010. Book review: Gavin Jones, Paulin Tay Straughan and Angelique Chan, Eds, Ultralow fertility in Pacific Asia. Journal of Population Research. Published online: 15 October 2010.

Billingsley, Sunnee, 2010. The post-communist fertility puzzle. Population Research and Policy Review 29(2): 193-231.

Boye, Katarina, 2010. Time spent working. Paid work, housework and the gender difference in psychological distress. European Societies 12(3): 419-442.

Bäckman, Olof, and Tommy Ferrarini, 2010. Combating child poverty? A multilevel assessment of links between family policy institutions in 20 countries. Journal of Social Policy 39(2): 275-296.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, Trude Lappegård, and Gunnar Andersson, 2010. Family policy and fertility: Fathers’ and mothers’ use of parental leave and continued childbearing in Norway and Sweden. Journal of European Social Policy 20(1): 45-57.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, 2010. Immigrants’ use of parental leave in Sweden. Pp 203-224 in L. B Knudsen and A Linhardt Olsen (Eds), Our Demographic Future – a Challenge. On the Need for Demographic Analyses. Scandinavian Population Studies, vol 14.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie and Johanna Lammi-Taskula, 2010. “Föräldraledighet” [Parental Leave], Pp.29-62 in I. Gislason och G.B. Eydal (Eds), Föräldraledighet, omsorgspolitik och jämställdhet i Norden. Tema Nord 2010:595, Nordic Council of Ministers, Copenhagen. Translated to  ”Parental leave, childcare and gender eaquality in the Nordic countries”Tema Nord 2011:562.

Evertsson, Marie, 2010. Kön [Gender]. In: Edling, C. and Liljeros, F. (Eds.), Ett delat samhälle – Om samhällets sociala skiktning [A divided society – On social stratification in society]. Stockholm: Liber. Chapter 3.

Evertsson, Marie and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2010. Parental Leave- Possibility or Trap? Does Family Leave Length Effect Swedish Women’s Labour Market Opportunities? European Sociological Review 27:1-16.

Ferrarini, Tommy, and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2010. Earner-career model at the cross-roads: Reforms and outcomes of Sweden’s family policy in comparative perspective. International Journal of Health Services 40(3): 373-398.

Ferrarini, Tommy, and Thor Norström, 2010. Family policy, economic development and infant mortality: A longitudinal comparative analysis. International Journal of Social Welfare 19: 89-102.

Ferrarini, Tommy, and Ola Sjöberg, 2010. Social policy institutions and health outcomes: Transition countries in comparative perspective. International Journal of Social Welfare 19: 60-66.

Gabrielli, Guiseppe, and Jan M Hoem, 2010. Italy's non-negligible cohabitational unions. European Journal of Population 26(1): 33–46.

Goldscheider, Frances, Livia Sz. Oláh, and Allan Puur, 2010. Reconciling studies of men’s gender attitudes and fertility: Response to Westoff and Higgins. Demographic Research 22(8): 189-198.

Gupta, Sanjiv, Marie Evertsson, Daniela Grunow, and Magnus Nermo, 2010. The economic disparity in time spent on housework among women in Germany, Sweden, and the US. In: Treas, J. and Drobnic, S. (Eds.), Dividing the Domestic. Men, Women and Housework in Cross-national Perspective: 105-124. Stanford University Press.

Hobson, Barbara, and Susanne Fahlén, 2010. Competing frames in gender, family and responsibility: From rights and obligations to rights and capabilities. In: Bridgeman, J. and Keating, H. (Eds.) Transforming Families. Regulating Responsibilities. Surrey: Ashgate.

Hoem, Jan M., Giuseppe Gabrielli, Aiva Jasilioniene, Dora Kostova, and Anna Matysiak, 2010. Levels of recent union formation: Six European countries compared. Demographic Research 22(9): 199-210.

Kennedy, Sheela, and Elizabeth Thomson, 2010. Children’s experiences of family disruption in Sweden: Differentials by parent education over three decades. Demographic Research 23: 479-508.

Malmberg, Bo, 2010. Low fertility and the housing market: Evidence from Swedish regional data. European Journal of Population 26(2): 229-244.

Mureşan, Cornelia, and Jan M. Hoem, 2010. The negative educational gradients in Romanian fertility. Demographic Research 22(4): 95-114.

Neyer, Gerda, 2010. Familienpolitik in Österreich zwischen Beharrung und Veränderung. Revue d'Allemagne et des pays de langue allemande 42(1): 57-70.

Perelli-Harris, Brienna, Wendy Sigle-Rushton, Michaela Kreyenfeld, Trude Lappegård, Renske Keizer, and Caroline Berghammer, 2010. The educational gradient of childbearing within cohabitation in Europe. Population and Development Review 36(4): 775-801.

Sjöberg, Ola, 2010. Social insurance as a collective resource: Unemployment benefits, job insecurity and subjective well-being in a comparative perspective. Social Forces 88(3): 1281-1304.

Sjöberg, Ola, 2010. Ambivalent attitudes, contradictory institutions: Ambivalence in gender-role attitudes in comparative perspective. International Journal of Comparative Sociology 51(1-2): 33-57.

Sjöberg, Ola, Joakim Palme, and Eero Carroll, 2010. Unemployment insurance. In: The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Social Policy. Oxford University Press.

Sjöberg, Ola, and Tommy Ferrarini, 2010. Social policy and health: Transition countries in a comparative perspective. International Journal of Social Welfare, 19 (Suppl 1): 60-88.

Ström, Sara, 2010. Housing and first births in Sweden, 1972-2005. Housing Studies 25(4): 509-526.

Thomson, Elizabeth, and Eva Bernhardt, 2010. Education, values and cohabitation in Sweden. Marriage and Family Review 46: 1-21.

Wiik, Kenneth A., Eva Bernhardt, and Turid Noack, 2010. Love or money? Marriage intentions among young cohabitors in Norway and Sweden. Acta Sociologica 53(3): 269-297.

 

2009

Aisenbrey, Silke, Marie Evertsson and Daniela Grunow, 2009. Is there a career penalty for mothers’ time out? Germany, Sweden and the U.S. compared. Social Forces 88(2): 573-606.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2009. Family policies in Sweden and the Swedish life-cycle model. In: von der Leyen, U., and Spidla, V. (Eds.), Voneinender lernen – miteinander handeln: Aufgaben und Perspektiven der Europäischer Allianz für Familien: 159-170. Baden-Baden: Nomos.

Andersson, Gunnar, Marit Rønsen, Lisbeth Knudsen, Trude Lappegård, Gerda Neyer, Kari Skrede, Kathrin Teschner, and Andres Vikat, 2009. Cohort fertility patterns in the Nordic countries. Demographic Research 20(14): 313-352.

Boye, Katarina, 2009. Work and well-being in a comparative perspective – the role of family policy. European Sociological Review 27(1): 16-30.

Boye, Katarina, 2009. Relatively different? How do gender differences in well-being depend on paid and unpaid work in Europe? Social Indicators Research 93(3): 509-525.

Bäckman, Olof, Ingrid Esser, Tommy Ferrarini, Kenneth Nelson, Yerko Rojas, and Ola Sjöberg, 2009. Comparative indicators of job quality and social protection. In: Guillén Rodrigez, A.M., and Dahl, S.Å. (Eds.), Quality of Work in the European Union. Brussels: Peter Lang.

Bäckman, Olof, Ingrid Esser, Tommy Ferrarini, Tomas Korpi, Kenneth Nelson, Yerko Rojas, and Ola Sjöberg, 2009. Indicadores Comparativos Sobre Calidad En El Empleo Y Protection Social. In: Guillén Rodríguez, A-M., Guitérrez Palacios, R., and González Begega, S. (Eds.), Calidad Del Trabajo En La Unión Europa. Concepto, Tensiones, Dimensiones. Navarra: Thomson Civitas.

De la Croix, David, Thomas Lindh, and Bo Malmberg, 2009. Demographic change and economic growth in Sweden. Journal of Macroeconomics 31(1): 132-148.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, and Ann-Christin Jans, 2009. Consequences of fathers’ parental leave use: Evidence from Sweden. Finnish Demographic Yearbook 2009: 51-62.

Esser, Ingrid, Tommy Ferrarini, Kenneth Nelson, and Ola Sjöberg, 2009. A framework for comparing social protection in developing and developed countries: The example of child benefits. International Social Security Review 62(1): 91-115.

Evertsson, Marie, Paula England, Irma Mooi-Reci, Joan Hermsen, Jeanne de Bruijn, and David Cotter, 2009. Is gender inequality greater at lower or higher educational levels? Common patterns in the Netherlands, Sweden, and the United States. Social Politics 16(2): 210-241.

Hobson, Barbara, and Susanne Fahlén, 2009. Competing scenarios for European fathers: Adversity and risk? Opportunities and agency for a work family balance. The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science July 2009, 624: 214-233.

Hoem, Jan M., Aiva Jasilioniene, Dora Kostova, and Cornelia Mureşan, 2009. Traces of the Second Demographic Transition in selected countries in Central and Eastern Europe: Union formation as a demographic manifestation. European Journal of Population 25(3): 239-255.

Hoem, Jan M., Aiva Jasilioniene, Dora Kostova, and Cornelia Mureşan, 2009. The structure of recent first-union formation in Romania. Romanian Journal of Population Studies 3(1): 33-44.

Kulu, Hill, Paul Boyle, and Gunnar Andersson, 2009. High suburban fertility: Evidence from four Northern European countries. Demographic Research 21(31): 915-944.

Lindh, Thomas and Bo Malmberg, 2009. European Union economic growth and the age structure of the population. Economic Change and Restructuring 42(3): 159-187.

Neyer, Gerda, 2009. Bildung und Kinderlosigkeit in Österreich und in Schweden. Zeitschrift für Familienforschung / Journal of Family Research 21(3): 287-310.

Neyer, Gerda, 2009. Rodinná politika a plodnost v Evrope: Pronatalitní politika v souvislosti s politikou genderovou, politikou zamestnanosti a opatreneními týkajícími se péce o deti [Family policies and fertility in Europe: Fertility policies at the intersection of gender policies, employment policies and care policies]. Demografie 51: 235-251.

Oláh, Livia Sz., 2009. Zeitpolitiken und Fertilität: Fertilitätsraten, Frauenerwerbstätigkeit und die Zeitstrukturen frühkindlicher Betreuung und Bildung im Europa der Nachkriegszeit [Time policies and fertility: Fertility rates, female work and the time structure of early childhood education in post-war Europe]. In: Stecher, L., C. Allemann-Ghionda, W. Helsper, and E. Klieme, Eds, Zeitschrift für Pädagogik 54: 247-265. Beiheft: Ganztägige Bildung und Betreuung.

Sjöberg, Ola, 2009. Corporate governance and earnings inequality in the OECD countries 1979–2000. European Sociological Review 25(5): 519-534.

Wiik, Kenneth A., Turid Noack, and Eva Bernhardt, 2009. A study of commitment and relationship quality in Sweden and Norway. Journal of Marriage and the Family 71(3): 465-477.

 

2008

Andersson, Gunnar, 2008. A review of policies and practices related to the “highest-low” fertility of Sweden. Vienna Yearbook of Population Research 2008: 89-102.

Dronkers, Jaap and Juho Härkönen, 2008. The intergenerational transmission of divorce in cross-national perspective: Results from the Fertility and Family Surveys. Population Studies 62(3): 273-288.

Frejka, Tomas, Tomas Sobotka, Jan M. Hoem, and Laurent Toulemon, 2008. Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe, Special Collection 7 of Demographic Research (3 volumes). With Summary and general conclusions as article 19(2): 5-14.

Halldén, Karin, E. le Grand  & Z. Hellgren (eds.), 2008. Ethnicity and social divisions: Contemporary research in sociology. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

Halldén, Karin, 2008. The Swedish educational system and the ISCED-97". In S. Schneider (ed.) The International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED-97). An evaluation of content and criterion validity in 15 European countries. Mannheim: MZES.

Halldén, Karin & Martin Hällsten, 2008. Increasing employment instability among young people? Labor market entries and early careers in Sweden 1980-2000. In H.-P. Blossfeld, S. Buchholz, E. Bukodi & K. Kurz (eds.) Young workers, globalization and the labor market. Comparing early working life in wleven countries. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.

Hoem, Jan M., and Dora Kostova, 2008. Early traces of the Second Demographic Transition in Bulgaria: A joint analysis of marital and non-marital union formation. Population Studies 62(3): 259-271.

Hoem, Jan M., 2008. Preface to Demographic Research, Special Collection 7: Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe, article 19(1): 1-4.

Hoem, Jan M., 2008. The impact of public policies on European fertility. Overview Chapter 8 of Demographic Research, Special Collection 7: Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe, article 19(10): 249-259.

Lindh, Thomas and Bo Malmberg, 2008. Demography and housing demand: What can we learn from residential construction data? Journal of Population Economics 21(3): 521-539.

le Grand, E., Z. Hellgren  & K. Halldén, 2008. Social stratification in multiethnic societies: Class and ethnicity. In K. Halldén, E. le Grand & Z. Hellgren (eds.) Ethnicity and social divisions: Contemporary research in sociology. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

Lundberg Olle, Monica Åberg Yngwe, Maria Kölegård Stjärne, Jon Ivar Elstad, Olli Kangas, Tommy Ferrarini, Thor Norström, Joakim Palme and Johan Fritzell, 2008. The role of welfare state principles and generosity in social policy programmes for public health: An international comparative study. The Lancet 372: 1633-1640.

Neyer, Gerda, and Gunnar Andersson, 2008. Consequences of family policies on childbearing behavior: Effects or artifacts? Population and Development Review 34(4): 699-724.

Oláh, Livia Sz., and Eva Bernhardt, 2008. Sweden: Combining childbearing and gender equality. Demographic Research, Special Collection 7: Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe 19(28): 1105-1144.

Puur, Allan, Livia Sz. Oláh, Mariam Irene Tazi-Preve and Jürgen Dorbritz, 2008. Men’s childbearing desires and views of the male role in Europe at the dawn of the 21st century. Demographic Research 19(56): 1883-1912.

Fortini, Marco, Luca Mancini, Luigi Marcone, Eleonora Mussino and Evelina Paluzzi, 2014. Who settles down in Italy? Transition to residency of non-EU migrants. Rivista Italiana di Economia, Demografia e Statistica, forthcoming.