East-West Center Reprints: Population Series (1971-)

The Reprint series brings selected articles, originating from research at the East-West Center but published elsewhere, to the attention of population specialists in the Asia-Pacific region. The Center has produced very few reprints in recent years and distributes its existing stock only to readers in developing countries through thePublications Sales Office. Others may find these articles in the print and electronic collections of academic and public libraries. Reprints are distributed by surface mail on a complimentary basis.

No 319. Marital fertility control among the Qing nobility: Implications for two types of preventive checks by Wang Feng, James Lee, and Cameron Campbell. From Population Studies, 49(3), November 1995. (Limited quantity available)

No. 318. Provincial patterns of contraceptive use in China by Quanhe Yang. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 9(4), December 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 317. Determinants of the decline in parity progression ratios in China, 1979-1984: A factor analysis of provincial data by Quanhe Yang. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 20(3), September 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 316. Asian immigrant entrepreneurs and non-entrepreneurs: A comparative study of recent Korean and Filipino immigrants by James T. Fawcett and Robert W. Gardner. From Population and Environment: A Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies, 15(3), January 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 315. Island autobiographies of movement: Alternative ways of knowing? By Murray Chapman. From Ethnogéographies, 1995. (Limited quantity available)

No. 314. Below replacement fertility in China? A close look at recent evidence by Griffith Feeney and Yuan Jianhua. From Population Studies, 48(3), 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 313. Fertility in China: Past, present, prospects by Griffith Feeney. From Wolfgang Lutz, ed., The future population of the world: What can we assume today? Laxenburg, Austria: Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 312. HIV transmission and the balance of power between women and men: A global view by Karen Oppenheim Mason. From Health Transition Review, 4(Suppl.), 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 311. Consequences of son preference in a low-fertility society: Imbalance of the sex ratio at birth in Korea by Chai Bin Park and Nam-Hoon Cho. From Population and Development Review, 21(1), March 1995. (Limited quantity available)

No. 310. Sino-Russian relations and Chinese workers in the Russian Far East: A porous border by Won Bae Kim. From Asian Survey, 34(12), December 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 309. Infant and child mortality among the Qing nobility: Implications for two types of positive check by James Lee, Wang Feng, and Cameron Campbell. From Population Studies, 48(3), 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 308. The role of the private sector in health services: Lessons for ASEAN by Gerard Russo. From ASEAN Economic Bulletin, 11(2), November 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 307. Fertility decline in East Asia by Griffith Feeney. From Science, 266, 2 December 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 306. Effect of birth spacing on infant survival in Thailand: Two-stage logit analysis by Chai Bin Park, Sakol Siasakul, and Chanpen Saengtienchai. From Southeast Asian Journal of Tropical Medicine and Public Health, 25(1), March 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 305. The intergenerational distribution of resources and income in Japan by Andrew Mason, Yoke-Yun Teh, Naohiro Ogawa, and Takehiro Fukui. From John Ermisch and Naohiro Ogawa, eds., The family, the market, and the state in ageing societies. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 304. The recent epidemiology of HIV and AIDS in Thailand by Tim Brown, Werasit Sittitrai, Suphak Vanichseni, and Usa Thisyakorn. From AIDS, 8(Suppl. 2), August 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 303. Risk factors for HIV infection in Thailand by Werasit Sittitrai and Tim Brown. From AIDS,  8(Suppl. 2), August 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 302. Korean women's labor force participation: Attitude and behavior by Minja Kim Choe, Sae-Kwon Kong, and Karen Oppenheim Mason. From Dae-Sook Suh, ed., Korean studies: New Pacific currents. Honolulu: University of Hawai`i Press, 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 301. Sons, daughters, and intergenerational support in Taiwan by Yean-Ju Lee, William Parish, and Robert J. Willis. From American Journal of Sociology, 99(4), January 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 300. The economic performance and regional systems of China's cities by Sen-dou Chang and Won Bae Kim. From Review of Urban and Regional Development Studies, 6, 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 299. Care of the elderly in Japan: Changing norms and expectations by Naohiro Ogawa and Robert D. Retherford. From Journal of Marriage and the Family, 55(3), August 1993; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 66. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 298. Leaving the parental home: Census-based estimates for China, Japan, South Korea, United States, France, and Sweden by Zeng Yi, Ansley Coale, Minja Kim Choe, Liang Zhiwu, and Liu Li. From Population Studies, 48(1), March 1994. (Limited quantity available)

No. 297. Movement in the French Pacific: Recent situation and prospects by Gerard P. Baudchon. From Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 1(2), 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 296. Changes in Chinese marriage patterns during the twentieth century by Wang Feng and Nancy B. Tuma. From Proceedings of the IUSSP International Population Conference, Montreal. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1993. (Limited quantity available)

No. 295. Culture and the fertility transition: Thoughts on theories of fertility decline by Karen Oppenheim Mason. From GENUS, 48(3–4), 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 294. The resumption of fertility decline in Japan: 1973-92 by Naohiro Ogawa and Robert D. Retherford. From Population and Development Review, 19(4), December 1993. (Limited quantity available)

No. 293. Parity progression and birth intervals in China: The influence of policy in hastening fertility decline by Griffith Feeney and Wang Feng. From Population and Development Review, 19(1), March 1993. (Limited quantity available)

No. 292. Extended adolescence and the sexuality of Asian youth: Observations on research and policy by Peter Xenos. From M.L. Ng and L.S. Lam, eds., Sexuality in Asia: Selected papers from the Conference on Sexuality in Asia, May 1990. Hong Kong: Hong Kong College of Psychiatrists, 1993. (Limited quantity available)

No. 291. Demographic change, household resources, and schooling decisions by Andrew Mason. From Naohiro Ogawa, Gavin Jones, and Jeffrey G. Williamson, eds., Human resources in development along the Asia-Pacific rim. Singapore: Oxford University Press, 1993. (Limited quantity available)

No. 290. A comparison of four methods for projecting households by Andrew Mason and Rachel Racelis. From International Journal of Forecasting, 8, 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 289. The demographic situation in Vietnam: Past, present, prospect by Griffith Feeney and Peter Xenos. From Neil L. Jamieson, Nguyen Manh Hung, and A. Terry Rambo, eds., The challenges of Vietnam’s reconstruction. Fairfax, Virginia: Indochina Institute, George Mason University; and Honolulu: Indochina Initiative, East-West Center, 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 288. Progression to second and third births in China: Patterns and covariates in six provinces by Minja Kim Choe, Guo Fei, Wu Jianming, and Zhang Ruyue. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 18(4), 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 287. Potential movements of capital and labor in Northeast Asia by Won Bae Kim. From Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 1(3–4), 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 286. Family change and support of the elderly in Asia: What do we know? by Karen Oppenheim Mason. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 7(3), September 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 285. The role and structure of metropolises in China's urban economy by Won Bae Kim. From Third World Planning Review, 13(2), 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 284. Gender inequality in urban China: Education and employment by John Bauer, Wang Feng, Nancy E. Riley, and Zhao Xiaohua. From Modern China, 18(3), July 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 283. Population movement: Free or constrained? by Murray Chapman. From Ron Crocombe and Esau Tuza, eds., Independence, dependence, interdependence: The first 10 years of Solomon Islands Indepedence. Honoria: Solomon Islands College of Higher Education, Institute of Pacific Studies; and Solomon Islands Centre, University of the South Pacific, 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 282. Contraceptive method choice in the Philippines, 1973-83 by Zelda Zablan, Minja Kim Choe, James A. Palmore, Tauseef Ahmed, Adelamar Alcantara, and Kathryn Kost. From Journal of Biosocial Science, 11(Suppl.), 1989. (Limited quantity available)

No. 281. The parity structure of fertility decline in Thailand, 1953-1979 by Norman Y. Luther and Chintana Pejaranonda. From GENUS, 47(1–2), 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 280. Determinants of contraceptive method choice in an industrial city of India by Minja Kim Choe, J. R. Rele, and James A. Palmore. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 6(3), September 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 279. Asian immigration: The view from the United States by Robert W. Gardner. From Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 1(1), 1992. (Limited quantity available)

No. 278. Prospects for increased contraceptive pill use in Japan by Naohiro Ogawa and Robert D. Retherford. From Studies in Family Planning, 22(6), November-December 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 277. Distributional analysis of period fertility by Griffith Feeney and Wolfgang Lutz. From Wolfgang Lutz, ed., Future demographic trends in Europe and North America: What can we assume today? San Diego: Academic Press, 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 276. The future of coastal developments in the Yellow Sea rimlands by Won Bae Kim. From Journal of Northeast Asian Studies, 9(4), Winter 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 275. Population management information systems in the 1990s: Evolution, revolution, or recycling? by James Palmore and Joung-Im Kim Palmore. From Monitoring and evaluating family planning programmes in the 1990s. Asian Population Studies Series, No. 104. Bangkok: United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 274. Fertility decline in Taiwan: A study using parity progression ratios by Griffith Feeney. From Demography, 28(3), August 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 273. Pacific island movement and socioeconomic change: Metaphors of misunderstanding by Murray Chapman. From Population and Development Review, 17(2), June 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 272. Rural households, labor flows and the housing construction industry in Bandung, Indonesia by Tommy Firman. From Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 82(2), 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 271. Birth order and intelligence: Further tests of the confluence model by Robert D. Retherford and William H. Sewell. From American Sociological Review, 56(2), April 1991. (Out of print)

No. 270. Foreign investment and demographic dynamics of the Asia-Pacific region by Lee-Jay Cho and Linda G. Martin. From Asian Economic Journal, 4(1), March 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 269. Demographic change and Asian labor markets in the 1990s by John Bauer. From Population and Development Review, 16(4), December 1990. (Out of print)

No. 268. Population aging policies in East Asia and the United States by Linda G. Martin. From Science, 251, February 1991. (Limited quantity available)

No. 267. Recent trends in fertility and nuptiality in China by Ansley J. Coale, Wang Feng, Nancy Riley, and Lin Fu De. From Science, 251, January 1991. (Out of print)

No. 266. Changing intergenerational family relations in East Asia by Linda G. Martin. From The Annals of the American Association of Political and Social Science, 510, July 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 265. Chinese demography: The state of the field by William Lavely, James Lee, and Wang Feng. From Journal of Asian Studies, 49(4), November 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 264. Effect of famine on child survival in Matlab, Bangladesh by Minja Kim Choe and Abdur Razzaque. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 5(2), June 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 263. Youth, sexuality and public policy in Asia: A research perspective by Peter Xenos. From Stella R. Quah, ed., The family as an asset: An international perspective on marriage, parenthood and social policy. Towson, Maryland: Times Publishing Group, 1990; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 59. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1989. (Out of print)

No. 262. Strength of fertility motivation: Its effects on contraceptive use in rural Sri Lanka by Robert D. Retherford, Shyam Thapa, and Victor De Silva. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 4(4), December 1989. (Limited quantity available)

No. 261. One-child families or a baby boom? Evidence from China's 1987 one-per-hundred survey by Norman Y. Luther, Griffith Feeney, and Weimin Zhang. From Population Studies, 44, July 1990. (Out of print)

No. 260. A minority group and China's one-child policy: The case of the Koreans by Chai Bin Park and Jing-Qing Han. From Studies in Family Planning, 21(3), May/June 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 259. Labor force participation of married women in contemporary Korea by Sae Kwon Kong and Minja Kim Choe. From Journal of Population and Health Studies, 9(2), December 1989. (Limited quantity available)

No. 258. A decomposition of recent fertility changes in South Asia by Robert D. Retherford and J. R. Rele. From Population and Development Review, 15(4), December 1989. (Limited quantity available)

No. 257. Asia 2010: The power of people by John Bauer and Andrew Mason with Carl Goldstein, N. Balakrishnan, Mark Clifford, Paul Handley, Lincoln Kaye, Jonathan Moore, Doug Tsuruoka, and Michael Vatikiotis. From Far Eastern Economic Review, 17 May 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 256. The status of South Asia's growing elderly population by Linda G. Martin. From Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, 5(2), April 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 255. Population distribution policy in China: A review by Won Bae Kim. From Regional Development Dialogue, 11(1), Spring 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 254. Rice price fluctuations and fertility in late Tokugawa Japan by Griffith Feeney and Hamano Kiyoshi. From The Journal of Japanese Studies, 16(1), Winter 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 253. Emerging issues in cross-national survey research on ageing in Asia by Linda G. Martin. From International Population Conference, New Delhi. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1989. (Limited quantity available)

No. 252. The Chinese in Hawai'i: A historical and demographic perspective by Eleanor C. Nordyke and Richard K. C. Lee. From Hawaiian Journal of History, 23, 1989. (Limited quantity available)

No. 251. Continuity and change in population movement: The case of Nepal by Bhim Prasad Subedi. From Population Geography, 10(1-2), June-December 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 250. Education, occupational prestige, and income of Asian Americans by Herbert R. Barringer, David T. Takeuchi, and Peter Xenos. From Sociology of Education, 63(1), January 1990. (Limited quantity available)

No. 249. Living arrangement of the elderly in Fiji, Korea, Malaysia, and the Philippines by Linda G. Martin. From Demography, 26(4), November 1989. (Out of print)

No. 248. The role of surveys in the study of international migration: An appraisal by James T. Fawcett and Fred Arnold. From International Migration Review, 21(4), Winter 1987; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 50. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 247. How intelligence affects fertility by Robert D. Retherford and William H. Sewell. From Intelligence, 13(2), April-June 1989; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 53. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1987. (Out of print)

No. 246. To what extent does breast-feeding explain birth-interval effects on early childhood mortality? by Robert D. Retherford, Minja Kim Choe, Shyam Thapa, and Bhakta B. Gubhaju. From Demography, 26(3), August 1989; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 51. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1987. (Out of print)

No. 245. The use of parity progression models in evaluating family planning programmes by Griffith Feeney. From African Population Conference, Dakar. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1988. (Out of print)

No. 244. Recent fertility dynamics in China: Results from the 1987 One Percent Population Survey by Griffith Feeney, Feng Wang, Mingkun Zhou, and Baoyu Xiao. From Population and Development Review, 15(2), June 1989. (Out of print)

No. 243. The effect of sex preference on fertility and family planning: Empirical evidence by Fred Arnold. From Population Bulletin of the United Nations, 23/24, 1987-88. (Out of print)

No. 242. Achievement of one-child fertility in rural areas of Jilin Province, China by Noriko O. Tsuya and Minja Kim Choe. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 14(4), December 1988; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 55. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 241. Migration intentions and behavior: Decision making in a rural Philippine province, by Gordon F. De Jong, Brenda Davis Root, Robert W. Gardner, James T. Fawcett, and Ricardo G. Abad; The best-laid schemes: An analysis of discrepancies between migration intentions and behavior by Robert W. Gardner, Gordon F. De Jong, Fred Arnold, and Benjamin v. Carino. From James T. Fawcett, ed., Migration intentions and behavior: Third World perspectives. Special issue of Population and Environment, 8(1&2), Spring/Summer 1985-86. (Limited quantity available)

No. 240. The effect of cohort size on relative wages in Japan by Linda G. Martin and Naohiro Ogawa. From Ronald D. Lee, W. Brian Arthur, and Gerry Rodgers, eds., Economics of changing age distributions in developed countries. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 239. The roles of individuals' socioeconomic characteristics and the government family planning program in China's fertility decline by Wang Feng. From Population Research and Policy Review, 7(3), 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 238. Expectations, family networks, and emigration: A study of Filipino decision making by Lynna-Marie Sycip and James T. Fawcett. From Philippine Journal of Psychology, 24, 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 237. Blacks in Hawai'i: A demographic and historical perspective by Eleanor C. Nordyke. From Hawaiian Journal of History, 22, 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 236. Historical demography in China: Review and perspective by Feng Wang. From IUSSP Newsletter, 34, September-December 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 235. Reconstruction of birth histories from census and household survey data by Norman Y. Luther and Lee-Jay Cho. From Population Studies, 42(3), November 1988; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 49. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 234. Intelligence and family size reconsidered by Robert D. Retherford and William H. Sewell. From Social Biology, 35(1-2), Spring-Summer 1988; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 39. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1986. (Out of print)

No. 233. The value of children and the transition to parenthood by James T. Fawcett. From Marriage and Family Review, 12(3/4), 1988; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 44. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 232. Consistent correction of international migration data for Sri Lanka, 1971-81 by Norman Y. Luther, K.H.W. Gaminiratne, Soma de Silva, and Robert D. Retherford. From International Migration Review, 21(4), Winter 1987; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 45. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 231. 70 years of fertility change in Korea: New estimates from 1916 to 1985 by J. R. Rele. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 3(2), June 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 230. Population redistribution policy in Korea: A review by Won Bae Kim. From Population Research and Policy Review, 7, 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 229. The aging of Asia by Linda G. Martin. From Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences, 43(4), July 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 228. Analyzing birth intervals: Implications for demographic theory and data collection by Ronald R. Rindfuss, James A. Palmore, and Larry L. Bumpass. From Sociological Forum, 2(4), Fall 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 227. The fertility of Korean minority women in China: 1950-1985 by Jing-Qing Han, Lee-Jay Cho, Minja Kim Choe, and Chi-hsien Tuan. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 3(1), March 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 226. Saving, economic growth, and demographic change by Andrew Mason. From Population and Development Review, 14(1), March 1998. (Limited quantity available)

No. 225. Local area variation in reproductive behavior in the People's Republic of China, 1973-1982 by Ronald Freedman, Xiao Zhenyu, Li Bohua, and William R. Lavely. From Population Studies, 42(1), March 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 224. Incentives, disincentives, and family planning by James A. Palmore and Mui Teng Yap. From Population policies and programmes: Current status and future directions. Bangkok: Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), United Nations, 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 223. Education and fertility in two Chinese provinces: 1967-1970 to 1979-1982 by Ronald Freedman, Xiao Zhenyu, Li Bohua, and William R. Lavely. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 3(1), March 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 222. Microfilaria density distribution in the human population and its infectivity index for the mosquito population by Chai Bin Park. From Parasitology, 96(2), April 1988. (Limited quantity available)

No. 221. Consistent corrections of census and vital registration data by Norman Y. Luther and Robert D. Retherford. From Mathematical Population Studies, 1(1), 1988; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 35. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 220. An integration of two fertility analysis frameworks by Robert D. Retherford. From GENUS, 43(1–2), January–June 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 219. Sex differentials in infant and child mortality in Korea by Minja Kim Choe. From Social Biology, 34(1–2), Spring–Summer 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 218. Population movement studied at microscale: Experience and extrapolation by Murray Chapman. From GeoJournal, 15(4), December 1987; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 38. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1985. (Out of print)

No. 217. Fertility levels and trends in India, 1951-81 by J. R. Rele. From Population and Development Review, 13(3), September 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 216. Recent trends in household structure in Asia by Andrew Mason and Linda G. Martin. From Proceedings of Conference on Population Change in Taiwan during the 20th Century, December 14–15, 1985. Taipei: Population Association of China, 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 215. National saving rates and population growth: A new model and new evidence by Andrew Mason. From D. Gale Johnson and Ronald D. Lee, eds., Population growth and economic development: Issues and evidence. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 214. Census data for studying elderly populations by Linda G. Martin. From Asia-Pacific Population Journal, 2(2), June 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 213. Birds of passage no more: Migration decision making among Filipino immigrants in Hawaii by Fred Arnold. From International Migration, 25(1), March 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 212. Urban unemployment and labor force participation in Korea by Won Bae Kim. From Annals of Regional Science, 21(1), March 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 211. Period parity progression measures of fertility in China by Griffith Feeney and Jing-yuan Yu. From Population Studies, 41(1), March 1987. (Out of print)

No. 210. Overseas workers' remittances in Asian development by Charles W. Stahl and Fred Arnold. From International Migration Review, 20(4), Winter 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 209. Immigrant recruitment into the labor force: Social networks among Filipinos in Hawaii by Fe Caces. From AMERASIA, 13(1), 1986-87. (Limited quantity available)

No. 208. Infant mortality trends and differentials in Nepal by Bhakta B. Gubhaju, Minja Kim Choe, Robert D. Retherford, and Shyam Thapa. From Studies in Family Planning, 18(1), 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 207. Analyzing fertility histories: Do restrictions bias results? by Ronald R. Rindfuss, Larry L. Bumpass, and James A. Palmore. From Demography, 24(1), 1987. (Limited quantity available)

No. 206. Maternal and child health and family planning services by Jae-Mo Yang and Chai Bin Park. From Use of rural health services. Proceedings of the Regional Seminar on the Use of Rural Health Services, 20–25 January 1986. Manila: Asian Development Bank, 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 205. Rural Punjabi social organization and marriage timing strategies in Pakistan by Thomas E. Fricke, Sabiha H. Syed, and Peter C. Smith. From Demography, 23(4), 1986; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 36. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1985. (Out of print)

No. 204. Determinants of Korean birth intervals: The confrontation of theory and data by Larry L. Bumpass, Ronald R. Rindfuss, and James A. Palmore. From Population Studies, 40(3), 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 203. The place of child-spacing as a factor in infant mortality: A recursive model by Chai Bin Park. From American Journal of Public Health, 76(8), 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 202. Sex preference, fertility, and family planning in China by Fred Arnold and Liu Zhao-xiang. From Population and Development Review, 12(2), 1986. (Out of print)

No. 201. Averting crisis in Asia? by Lee-Jay Cho. From Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 42(4), 1986. (Out of print)

No. 200. An economic analysis of recent fertility in Japan: An application of the Butz-Ward model by Naohiro Ogawa and Andrew Mason. From Jinko Gaku Kenkyu, 9, May 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 199. Linkages between internal and international migration: The Ilocos Norte experience by Fred Arnold and Ricardo G. Abad. From Philippine Population Journal, 1(2), June 1985. (Limited quantity available)

No. 198. Fijians and Indo-Fijians in Suva: Rural-urban movements and linkages by Shashikant Nair. From Murray Chapman and R. Mansell Prothero, eds., Circulation in population movement: Substance and concepts from the Melanesian case. New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1985. (Limited quantity available)

No. 197. Circulation between ‘home’ and other places: Some propositions by Murray Chapman and R. Manuel Protero; and Me go ‘walkabout’, you too? by Murray Chapman. From Murray Chapman and R. Mansell Prothero, eds., Circulation in population movement: Substance and concepts from the Melanesian case. New York: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1985. (Out of print)

No. 196. Evaluation of contraceptive history data in the Republic of Korea by Anne R. Pebley, Noreen Goldman, and Minja Kim Choe. From Studies in Family Planning, 17(1), January/February 1986. (Limited quantity available)

No. 195. Health of Hmong in Thailand: Risk factors, morbidity, and mortality in comparison with other ethnic groups by Peter Kunstadter. From Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry, 9(4), 1985. (Out of print)

No. 194. U.S. farm migration: An application of the Harris-Todaro model by Daniel B. Suits. From Economic Development and Cultural Change, 33(4), 1985. (Out of print)

No. 193. Decision making and sex selection with biased technologies by Neil G. Bennett and Andrew Mason. From Neil G. Bennett, ed., Sex selection of children. San Diego, California: Academic Press, 1983. (Out of print)

No. 192. Cultural variations in the transition to marriage in four Asian societies by Paul Cheung, Josefina Cabigon, Aphichat Chamratrithirong, Peter F. McDonald, Sabila Syed, Andrew Cherlin, and Peter C. Smith. From International Population Conference, Florence. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1985. (Out of print)

No. 191. A theory of marital fertility transition by Robert D. Retherford. From Population Studies, 39(2), July 1985; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 29. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1983. (Out of print)

No. 190. Parity progression projection by Griffith Feeney. From International Population Conference, Florence. Vol. 4. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1985. (Out of print)

No. 189. The non-economic consequences of Asian labor migration to the Middle East by Nasra M. Shah and Fred Arnold. From International Population Conference, Florence. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1985. (Out of print)

No. 188. Exploring the normative basis for age at marriage in Thailand: An example from focus group research by Anthony Pramualratana, Napaporn Havanon, and John Knodel. From Journal of Marriage and the Family, 47(1), February 1985. (Out of print)

No. 187. Measuring the effect of sex preference on fertility: The case of Korea by Fred Arnold. From Demography, 22(2), May 1985. (Out of print)

No. 186. Migration of women to cities: The Asian situation in comparative perspective by Siew-Ean Khoo, Peter C. Smith, and James T. Fawcett. From Women in migration, special issue of International Migration Review, 18(4), Winter 1984. (Out of print)

No. 185. The impact of age at marriage and proportions marrying on fertility by Peter C. Smith. From Rodolfo A. Bulatao and Ronald D. Lee, eds., Determinants of fertility in developing countries. Vol. 2. San Diego, California: Academic Press, 1983. (Out of print)

No. 184. Diffusion processes affecting fertility regulation by Robert D. Retherford. From Rodolfo A. Bulatao and Ronald D. Lee, eds., Determinants of fertility in developing countries. Vol. 2. San Diego, California: Academic Press, 1983. (Out of print)

No. 183. Perceptions of the value of children: Satisfaction and costs by James T. Fawcett. From Rodolfo A. Bulatao and Ronald D. Lee, eds., Determinants of fertility in developing countries. Vol. 2. San Diego, California: Academic Press, 1983. (Out of print)

No. 182. Shadow households and competing auspices: Migration behavior in the Philippines by Fe Caces, Fred Arnold, James T. Fawcett, and Robert W. Gardner. From Journal of Development Economics, 17(1–2), January–February 1985; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 33. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1984. (Out of print)

No. 181. Determinants of birth-interval length in the Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia: A hazard-model analysis by James Trussell, Linda G. Martin, Robert Feldman, James A. Palmore, Mercedes Concepcion, and Datin Noor Laily Bt. Dato’ Abu Bakar. From Demography, 22(2), May 1985. (Out of print)

No. 180. Personal networks and the adoption of family planning in rural Korea by Joung Im Kim and James A. Palmore. From Journal of Population and Health Studies, 4(2), December 1984. (Out of print)

No. 179. Population dynamics and policy in the People's Republic of China by Lee-Jay Cho. From Marvin E. Wolfgang, ed., China in transition. Special issue of The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 476, 1984. (Out of print)

No. 178. Analysing open birth interval distributions by Griffith Feeney and John A. Ross. From Population Studies, 38(3), November 1984. (Out of print)

No. 177. The value of daughters and sons: A comparative study of the gender preferences of parents by Fred Arnold and Eddie C. Y. Kuo. From Journal of Comparative Family Studies, 15(2), Summer 1984. (Out of print)

No. 176. Census-derived estimates of fertility by duration since first marriage in the Republic of Korea by Robert D. Retherford, Lee-Jay Cho, and Nam-Li Kim. From Demography, 21(4), November 1984. (Out of print)

No. 175. Comparative analysis of fertility orientations: World Fertility Survey findings by Lee-Jay Cho and Louise Kantrow. From Gerry E. Hendershot and Paul J. Placek, eds., Predicting fertility: Demographic studies of birth expectations. Lexington, Massachusetts: D.C. Heath and Company, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 174. Repeatability of infant deaths in Korea by Chai Bin Park and Alfred C. Hexter. From International Journal of Epidemiology, 13(3), September 1984. (Out of print)

No. 173. Asian labor migration to the Middle East by Fred Arnold and Nasra M. Shah. From International Migration Review, 18(2), Summer 1984; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 32. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1984. (Out of print)

No. 172. Conclusion by Lee-Jay Cho. From Roger Benjamin and Robert T. Kudrie, eds., The industrial future of the Pacific basin. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1984. (Out of print)

No. 171. Cultural ideals, socioeconomic change, and household composition: Karen, Lua', Hmong, and Thai in Northwestern Thailand by Peter Kunstadter. From Robert McC. Netting, Richard W. Wilk, and Eric J. Arnould, eds., Households: Comparative and historical studies of the domestic group. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984. (Out of print)

No. 170. Labor force and industrial development in the Pacific basin by Andrew Mason, Sung-Yeal Koo, and Wi-Sup Song. From Roger Benjamin and Robert T. Kudrie, eds., The industrial future of the Pacific basin. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1984. (Out of print)

No. 169. An assessment of Philippine cohort nuptiality trends by Peter C. Smith, Adelamar Alcantara, and Eliseo A. De Guzman. From Luisa T. Engracia, Corazon Mejia-Raymundo, and John B. Casterline, eds., Fertility in the Philippines: Further analysis of the Republic of the Philippines Fertility Survey, 1978. Voorsburg, Netherlands: International Statistical Institute, 1984; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 28. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1982. (Out of print)

No. 168. Themes on circulation in the Third World by Murray Chapman and R. Mansell Prothero. From International Migration Review, 17(4), Winter 1983; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 26. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1982. (Out of print)

No. 167. International and internal migration decision-making: A value-expectancy based analytical framework of intentions to move from a rural Philippine province by Gordon F. De Jong, Ricardo G. Abad, Fred Arnold, Benjamin V. Carino, James T. Fawcett, and Robert W. Gardner. From International Migration Review, 17(3), Fall 1983. (Out of print)

No. 166. Pakistani workers in the Middle East: Volume, trends, and consequences by Nasta M. Shah. From International Migration Review, 17(3), Fall 1983. (Out of print)

No. 165. The analysis of linkages in demographic theory by W. Arthur Brian. From Demography, 21(1), February 1984. (Out of print)

No. 164. Highland populations in Northern Thailand by Peter Kunstadter. From John McKinnon and Wanat Bhruksasri, eds., Highlanders of Thailand. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1983. (Out of print)

No. 163. Motivations for childbearing among Malaysians by Poo-Kong Kee. From Journal of Biosocial Science, 14:157–66, January 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 22. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 162. Retirement policy and Japanese workers: Some results of an opinion survey by Naohiro Ogawa and Daniel B. Suits. From International Labour Review, 22(6), November–December 1983. (Out of print)

No. 161. Mortality decline and Japanese family structure by Linda G. Martin and Suzanne Culter. From Population and Development Review, 9(4), December 1983. (Out of print)

No. 160. Co-variates of child mortality in the Philippines, Indonesia, and Pakistan: An analysis based on hazard models by Linda G. Martin, James Trussell, Florentina Reyes Salvail, and Nasra M. Shah. From Population Studies, 37(3), November 1983. (Out of print)

No. 159. Urban-rural fertility differentials in Pakistan by Farhat Yusuf and Robert D. Retherford. From Journal of Biosocial Science, 13(4), October 1981. (Out of print)

No. 158. Why a population converges to stability by W. Brian Arthur. From American Mathematical Monthly, 88(8), October 1981. (Out of print)

No. 157. Population dynamics based on birth intervals and parity progression by Griffith Feeney. From Population Studies, 37(1), March 1983. (Out of print)

No. 156. Preference for sons, family size, and sex ratio: An empirical study in Korea by Chai Bin Park. From Demography, 20(3), August 1983; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 24. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1982. (Out of print)

No. 155. Migration, the urban informal sector, and earnings in the Philippines by Hagen Koo and Peter C. Smith. From The Sociological Quarterly, 24(2), Spring 1983. (Out of print)

No. 154. Sources of internal migration data in Indonesia: Their potential and limitations by Graeme J. Hugo. From Indonesian Journal of Demography, June 1982. (Out of print)

No. 153. The effect of alternative parameterization of the underlying model life table family on infant mortality trends derived by Feeney's method by Robert D. Retherford and Gek-Ching Thai. From GENUS, 37(1–2), January–June 1981; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 5. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 152. The transition in the value of children and the fertility transition by Rodolfo A. Bulatao. From C. Hohn and R. MacKensen, eds., Determinants of fertility trends: Theories re-examined. Liege: Ordina Editions, 1982. (Out of print)

No. 151. The variable rate-of-growth effect in the life-cycle saving model by Maxwell J. Fry and Andrew Mason. From Economic Inquiry, 20(3), July 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 12. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 150. Intergenerational differences in income: An analysis of Japan by Andrew Mason and Linda G. Martin. From Income distribution and the family. Supplement to Population and Development Review, 8, 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 16. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 149. Circular migration in Indonesia by Graeme J. Hugo. From Population and Development Review, 8(1), March 1982. (Out of print)

No. 148. Evidence of age exaggeration in demographic estimates for Pakistan by Robert D. Retherford and G. Mujtaba Mirza. From Population Studies, 36(2), July 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 10. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 147. The components of population change in nineteenth-century South-east Asia: Village data from the Philippines by Peter C. Smith and Shui-Meng Ng. From Population Studies, 36(2), July 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 6. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 146. Urban future: Trends and prospects by Philip M. Hauser and Robert W. Gardner. From Population and the urban future. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1982. (Out of print)

No. 145. Mobility in North Thailand: A view from within by Anchalee Singhanetra-Renard. From Population mobility and development: Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Development Studies Centre Monograph No. 27. Canberra: Australian National University, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 144. Intermediate variables and educational differentials in fertility in Korea and the Philippines Larry Bumpass, Ronald R. Rindfuss, James A. Palmore, Mercedes Concepcion, and Byoung Mohk Choi. From Demography, 19(2), May 1982. (Out of print)

No. 143. Contrasting marriage patterns and fertility in Southeast Asia: Indonesia and the Philippines compared by Peter C. Smith. From Lado Ruzicka, ed., Nuptiality and fertility. Liege: Ordina Editions, 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 8. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 142. The transformation of Korean child-spacing practices by Ronald R. Rindfuss, Larry L. Bumpass, James A. Palmore, Dae Woo Han. From Population Studies, 36(1), March 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 11. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 141. Infant mortality estimates based on the 1976 Nepal Fertility Survey by Shyam Thapa and Robert D. Retherford. From Population Studies, 36(1), March 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 3. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 140. The unmet need for contraception in Pakistan: A review of program targets by Nasra M. Shah and Tauseef Ahmed. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 8(1), March 1981; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 18. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 139. Migration, sex and occupations in urban Indonesia and Thailand by Peter C. Smith. From International Population Conference, Manila. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1981; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 21. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 138. Dynamic perspectives in the study of fertility decision-making: Successive decisions within a fertility career by Rodolfo A. Bulatao and James T. Fawcett. From International Population Conference, Manila. Vol. 1. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 137. Population research and population policy in Korea in the 1970s by Duck-Woo Nam and Ro Kong-Kyun. From Population and Development Review, 7(4), December 1981. (Out of print)

No. 136. Policy implications of circulation: Some answers from the grassroots by Murray Chapman. From G.W. Jones and H.V. Richter, eds., Population mobility and development: Southeast Asia and the Pacific. Development Studies Centre Monograph No. 27. Canberra: Australian National University, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 135. Japanese response to an aging labor force by Linda G. Martin. From Population Research and Policy Review, 1(1), January 1982; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 14. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1981. (Out of print)

No. 134. The family planning program in Pakistan: What went wrong? by Warren C. Robinson, Makhdoom A. Shah, and Nasra M. Shah. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 7(3), September 1981. (Out of print)

No. 133. Application of the own-children method of fertility estimation to an anthropological census of a Nepalese village by Robert Schroeder and Robert D. Retherford. From Demography India, 8(1-2), January–December 1979. (Out of print)

No. 132. Attributable risk for recurrent events: An extension of Levin's measure by Chai Bin Park. From American Journal of Epidemiology, 113(5), May 1981. (Out of print)

No. 131. Purdah and family planning in Pakistan by Nasra M. Shaf and Elizabeth Q. Butatao. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 7(1), March 1981. (Out of print)

No. 130. Use of modern contraceptives in Indonesia: A challenge to the conventional wisdom by Ronald Freedman, Siew-Ean Khoo, and Bondan Supraptilah. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 7(1), March 1981. (Out of print)

No. 129. Values and disvalues of children in successive childbearing decisions by Rodolfo A. Bulatao. From Demography, 18(1), February 1981. (Out of print)

No. 128. The recent demographic history of sterilization in Korea by Charles F. Westoff, Noreen Goldman, Siew-Ean Khoo, and Minja Kim Choe. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 6(4), December 1980. (Out of print)

No. 127. Social origins and sex-differential schooling in the Philippines by Peter C. Smith and Paul P. L. Cheung. From Comparative Education Review, 25(1), February 1981. (Out of print)

No. 126. Singapore: Rapid fertility transition in a compact society by James T. Fawcett and Siew-Ean Khoo. From Population and Development Review, 6(4), December 1980. (Out of print)

No. 125. Analysis of vital statistics services in Thailand by Fred Arnold and Alois Kühner. From Vital registration systems in five developing countries: Honduras, Mexico, Philippines, Thailand, and Jamaica. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Health Statistics, 1980. (Out of print)

No. 124. The effect of induced abortion on the incidence of Down's Syndrome in Hawaii by Roy G. Smith, Robert W. Gardner, Patricia Steinhoff, Chin S. Chung, and James A. Palmore. From Family Planning Perspectives, 12(4), July/August 1980. (Out of print)

No. 123. Ethnic differentials in mortality in Hawaii, 1920-1970 by Robert W. Gardner. From Hawaii Medical Journal, 39(9), September 1980. (Out of print)

No. 122. A modification for use in destabilized populations of Brass's technique for estimating completeness of death registration by Linda G. Martin. From Population Studies, 34(2), July 1980. (Out of print)

No. 121. Trends and structure of female labour force participation in rural and urban Pakistan by Nasta M. Shah and Makhdoom A. Shah. From Alfred de Souza, ed., Women in contemporary India and South Asia. New Delhi: Indian Social Institute, 1980. (Out of print)

No. 120. Ethnic group, category, and identity: Karen in Northern Thailand by Peter Kunstadter. From Charles F. Keyes, ed., Ethnic adaptation and identity: The Karen on the Thai frontier with Burma. Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of Human Issues, 1979. (Out of print)

No. 119. Estimating infant mortality trends from child survivorship data by Griffith Feeney. From Population Studies, 34(1), March 1980. (Out of print)

No. 118. Asian marriage patterns in transition by Peter C. Smith. From Journal of Family History, 5(1), Spring 1980. (Out of print)

No. 117. Singapore’s population policies in perspective by James T. Fawcett; and Public policy and population change: An appraisal of the Singapore experience by James T. Fawcett and Peter S. J. Chen. From Peter S. J. Chen and James T. Fawcett, eds., Public policy and population change in Singapore. New York: The Population Council, 1979. (Out of print)

No. 116. Providing medical services to undocumented immigrants: Costs and public policy by Fred Arnold. From International Migration Review, 13(4), Winter 1979. (Out of print)

No. 115. Desired family size and contraceptive use in Pakistan by Nasra M. Shah and James A. Palmore. From International Family Planning Perspectives, 5(4), December 1979. (Out of print)

No. 114. Completeness and accuracy of reporting induced abortions performed in Hawaii’s hospitals, 1970–74 by Chin Sik Chung, Patricia G. Steinhoff, Ming-Pi Mi, Roy G. Smith, and Thomas A. Burch. From Public Health Reports, 94(5), September–October 1979. (Out of print)

No. 113. The value of a Filipino child: Pleasure and profit against cost and concern by Rodolfo A. Bulatao. From Population of the Philippines. Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) Country Monograph No. 5. Bangkok: United Nations, 1978. (Out of print)

No. 112. Optimal time paths with age-dependence: A theory of population policy by W. Brian Arthur and Geoffrey McNicoll. From The Review of Economic Studies, 44(1) February 1977. (Out of print)

No. 111. Demographic history: An approach to the study of the Filipino past by Peter C. Smith. From John A. Larkin, ed., Perspectives on Philippine historiography: A symposium. Monograph No. 21. New Haven: Yale University Southeast Asia Studies, 1979. (Out of print)

No. 110. The effect of infant death on subsequent fertility in Korea and the role of family planning by Chai Bin Park, Seung Hyun Han, and Minja Kim Choe. From American Journal of Public Health, 69(6), June 1979. (Out of print)

No. 109. Past and current contraceptive use in Pakistan by Nasra M. Shah. From Studies in Family Planning, 10(5), May 1979. (Out of print)

No. 108. The value and cost of children: Converging theory and research by James T. Fawcett. From Lado T. Ruzicka, ed., The economic and social supports for high fertility. Proceedings of a Conference held in Canberra, Australia, 16–18 November 1976. Family and Fertility Change: Changing African Family Project, Monograph No. 2. Canberra: Australian National University, 1977. (Out of print)

No. 107. Measuring the Thai family planning program’s impact on fertility rates: A comparison of computer models by Siew-Ean Khoo. From Studies in Family Planning, 10(4), April 1979. (Out of print)

No. 106. A theory of rapid fertility decline in homogeneous populations by Robert D. Retherford. From Studies in Family Planning, 10(2), February 1979; East-West Center Working Papers, Population Series, No. 1. Honolulu: East-West Center, 1980. (Out of print)

No. 105. Trends and differentials in nuptiality by Peter C. Smith. From Population of the Philippines. Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) Country Monograph No. 5. Bangkok: United Nations, 1978. (Out of print)

No. 104. The evolving pattern of interregional migration in the Philippines by Peter C. Smith. From The Philippine Economic Journal, 16(1–2) 1977. (Out of print)

No. 103. Women who obtain repeat abortions: A study based on record linkage by Patricia G. Steinhoff, Roy G. Smith, James A. Palmore, Milton Diamond, and C.S. Chung. From Family Planning Perspectives, 11(1), January/February 1979. (Out of print)

No. 102. Age-parity-specific birth rates and birth probabilities from census or survey data on own children by Robert D. Retherford and Lee-Jay Cho. From Population Studies, 32(3), November 1978. (Out of print)

No. 101. Crisis mortality in the nineteenth century Philippines: Data from parish records by Peter C. Smith. From Journal of Asian Studies, 38(1), November 1978. (Out of print)

No. 100. Ninety-seven years of mortality in Hawaii by Robert W. Gardner and Robert C. Schmitt. From Hawaii Medical Journal, 37(10), October 1978. (Out of print)

No. 99. Child mortality and maternal parity: Some policy implications by Peter Kunstadter. From International Family Planning Perspectives and Digest, 4(3), Fall 1978. (Out of print)

No. 98. The effect of family planning programs on fertility decline in four Asian countries by Siew-Ean Khoo and Chai Bin Park. From International Family Planning Perspectives and Digest, 4(3), Fall 1978. (Out of print)

No. 97. Decomposition of the change in the total fertility rate in the Republic of Korea, 1966-1970 by Robert D. Retherford and Naohiro Ogawa. From Social Biology, 25(2), Summer 1978. (Out of print)

No. 96. The value and cost of the first child by James T. Fawcett. From Warren B. Miller and Lucile F. Newman, eds., The first child and family formation. Chapel Hill: Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1978. (Out of print)

No. 95. The Japanese in Hawaii: A historical and demographic perspective by Eleanor C. Nordyke and Y. Scott Matsumoto. From Hawaiian Journal of History, 11, 1977. (Out of print)

No. 94. The social structure of underutilized labor in the Philippines: An application of Hauser’s labor utilization framework by Peter C. Smith and Lita J. Domingo. From Philippine Review of Business and Economics, 14(2), December 1977. (Out of print)

No. 93. Estimation of demographic parameters from census and vital registration data by Griffith Feeney. From International Population Conference. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1977. (Out of print)

No. 92. Relationships between the value and cost of children and fertility: Cross-cultural evidence by Rodolfo A. Bulatao and Fred Arnold. From International Population Conference, Mexico. Vol. 1. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1977. (Out of print)

No. 91. The potential reduction of medical complications and induced abortions by Roy G. Smith, James A. Palmore, and Patricia G. Steinhoff. From International Journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics, 15(4), January/February 1978. (Out of print)

No. 90. Spline functions fitted by standard regression methods by Daniel B. Suits, Andrew Mason, and Louis Chan. From Review of Economics and Statistics, 60(1), February 1978. (Out of print)

No. 89. Fertility preferences in five Asian countries by Lee-Jay Cho. From International Family Planning Perspectives and Digest, 4(1), Spring 1978. (Out of print)

No. 88. Sampling variability of own-children fertility estimates by Robert D. Retherford and Neil G. Bennett. From Demography, 14(4), November 1977. (Out of print)

No. 87. The fourth Korean child: The effect of son preference on subsequent fertility by Chai Bin Park. From Journal of Biosocial Science, 10(1), January 1978. (Out of print)

No. 86. Sex selection with biased technologies and its effect on the population sex ratio by Andrew Mason and Neil G. Bennett. From Demography, 14(3), August 1977. (Out of print)

No. 85. The measurement of labour utilization by Philip M. Hauser; and The measurement of labour utilization: More empirical results by Philip M. Hauser. From Malayan Economic Review, 19(1), April 1974 and 22(1), April 1977. (Out of print)

No. 84. The Euiryong experiment: A Korean innovation in household contraceptive distribution by Chai Bin Park and Lee-Jay Cho. From Studies in Family Planning¸ 8(3), March 1977. (Out of print)

No. 83. The Canadian pharmacist and family planning by Carl F. Grindstaff. From Family Planning Perspectives, 9(2), March/April 1977. (Out of print)

No. 82. The social demography of Filipino migrations abroad by Peter C. Smith. From International Migration Review, 10(3), Fall 1976. (Out of print)

No. 81. Demographic evaluation systems and psychological research designs by James A. Palmore. From Sidney H. Newman and Vaida D. Thompson, eds., Population psychology: Research and educational issues. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1976. (Out of print)

No. 80. Health care systems as socializing agents: Childbearing the North Thai and Western ways by Marjorie A. Muecke. From Social Science and Medicine, 10(7/8), August 1976. (Out of print)

No. 79. The demographic effects of local socioeconomic change on small populations: A Samoan example by Peter Pirie. From Leszek A. Kosinski and John W. Webb, eds., Population at microscale. Auckland: New Zealand Geographical Society, 1976. (Out of print)

No. 78. Tribal mobility as circulation: A Solomon Islands example of micro/macro linkages by Murray Chapman. From Leszek A. Kosinski and John W. Webb, eds., Population at microscale. Auckland: New Zealand Geographical Society, 1976. (Out of print)

No. 77. Method of payment: Relation to abortion complications by Roy G. Smith, Patricia G. Steinhoff, James A. Palmore, and Catherine Daly. From Health and Social Work, 1(2), May 1976. (Out of print)

No. 76. Female labor force participation and fertility: Some methodological and theoretical considerations by Monica S. Fong. From Social Biology, 23(1), Spring 1976. (Out of print)

No. 75. Economic-demographic models by Geoffrey McNicoll. From Leon Tabah, ed., Population growth and economic development in the Third World. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, Ordina Editions, 1976. (Out of print)

No. 74. The comparative anthropological study of medical systems in society by Peter Kunstadter. From Arthur Kleinman, Peter Kunstadter, E. Russell Alexander, and James L. Gale, eds., Medicine in Chinese cultures: Comparative studies in health care in Chinese and other societies. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1975. (Out of print)

No. 73. The utilization of conception cohorts for the evaluation of family planning programs by Roy G. Smith, Patricia G. Steinhoff, James A. Palmore, and Charlotte Payne. From Contraception, 13(4), April 1976. (Out of print)

No. 72. Lifetime probability of additional births by age and parity for American women, 1935–1968: A measurement of period fertility by Chai Bin Park. From Demography, 13(1), February 1976. (Out of print)

No. 71. Family planning opinion leadership in Korea: 1971 by James A. Palmore, Michael J. Furlong, Francis X. Buchmeier, Insook Han Park, and Laura M. Souder. From Journal of East and West Studies, 4(2), November 1975. (Out of print)

No. 70. The demographic situation in Malaysia by James A. Palmore, Ramesh Chander, and Dorothy Z. Fernandez. From John F. Kantner and Lee McCaffrey, eds., Population and development in Southeast Asia. Lexington, Massachusetts: D.C. Heath and Company, 1975. (Out of print)

No. 69. Population geography and the island Pacific by Murray Chapman. From Pacific Viewpoint, 16(2), 1975. (Out of print)

No. 68. Fertility and nuptiality: The local area mosaic by Peter C. Smith. From Wilhelm Flieger and Peter C. Smith, eds., A demographic path to modernity. Quezon City: Population Institute, University of the Philippines, 1975. (Out of print)

No. 67. Population policy and family planning programs in Asia and the Pacific by James A. Palmore and Chai Bin Park. From Lawasia, 4(2), December 1973. (Out of print)

No. 66. Demographic concepts and techniques for the study of small populations by Griffith Feeney. From Vern Carroll, ed., Pacific atoll populations. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1975. (Out of print)

No. 65. Influence of a folk superstition on fertility of Japanese in California and Hawaii by Kane Kaku and Y. Scott Matsumoto. From American Journal of Public Health, 65(2), February 1975. (Out of print)

No. 64. Pregnancy planning in Hawaii by Patricia G. Steinhoff, James A. Palmore, Roy G. Smith, Donald E. Morisky, and Ronald Pion. From Family Planning Perspectives, 7(3), May/June 1975. (Out of print)

No. 63. Sequential analysis of perceived commitment to partners in premarital coitus by Davor Jedlicka. From Journal of Marriage and the Family, 37(2), May 1975. (Out of print)

No. 62. Changing patterns of nuptiality by Peter C. Smith. From Wilhelm Flieger and Peter C. Smith, eds., A demographic path to modernity. Quezon City: Population Institute, University of the Philippines, 1975. (Out of print)

No. 61. Footnotes on implications of aggregated data used in population simulation by Peter Kunstadter. From Bennett Dyke and Jean Walters MacCluer, eds., Computer simulation in human population studies. San Diego: Academic Press, 1974. (Out of print)

No. 60. On the role of mental maps in migration research by Gary Fuller and Murray Chapman. From International Migration Review, 8(4), Winter 1974. (Out of print)

No. 59. On the spatial diffusion of fertility decline: The distance-to-clinic variable in a Chilean community by Gary A. Fuller. From Economic Geography, 50(4), October 1974. (Out of print)

No. 58. A spatio-temporal model of the mobility patterns in a multi-ethnic population, Hawaii by Shekhar P. Kukherji. From Leszek A. Kosinski and R. Mansell Prothero, eds., People on the move: Studies on internal migration. New York: Methuen, 1974. (Out of print)

No. 57. Mobility in a non-literate society: Method and analysis for two Guadalcanal communities by Murray Chapman. From Leszek A. Kosinski and R. Mansell Prothero, eds., People on the move: Studies on internal migration. New York: Methuen, 1974. (Out of print)

No. 56. A note on residential segregation in Honolulu by Kenneth L.K. Miu and Gary Fuller. From Proceedings of the Association of American Geographers. 6, 1974. (Out of print)

No. 55. Psychological research on family size and family planning in the United States by James T. Fawcett. From Professional Psychology, 5(3), August 1974. (Out of print)

No. 54. Sexuality, birth control and abortion: A decision-making sequence by Milton Diamond, Patricia G. Steinhoff, James A. Palmore, and Roy G. Smith. From Journal of Biosocial Science, 5(3), July 1973. (Out of print)

No. 53. Abortion in Hawaii: 1970-1971 by Roy G. Smith, Patricia G. Steinhoff, James A. Palmore, and Milton Diamond. From Hawaii Medical Journal, 32(4), July–August 1973. (Out of print)

No. 52. Abortion in Hawaii by Milton Diamond, James A. Palmore, Roy G. Smith, and Patricia G. Steinhoff. From Family Planning Perspectives, 5(1), Winter 1973. (Out of print)

No. 51. Comparative analysis of recent fertility trends in East Asia by Robert D. Retherford and Lee-Jay Cho. From International Population Conference. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1973. (Out of print)

No. 50. The own-children approach to fertility estimation: An elaboration by Lee-Jay Cho. From International Population Conference. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1973. (Out of print)

No. 49. Tobacco smoking and sex ratios in the United States by Robert D. Retherford. From Social Biology, 21(1), Spring 1974. (Out of print)

No. 48. Fertility, mortality, and life expectancy in pre-modern Japan by Susan B. Hanley. From Population Studies, 28(1), March 1974. (Out of print)

No. 47. Social and psychological aspects of fertility in Hong Kong by Betty Jamie Chung. From Henry P. David and Sung Jin Lee, eds., Social and psychological aspects of fertility in Asia: Proceedings of the technical seminar, Choonchun, Korea, 7–9 November 1973. 1974. (Out of print)

No. 46. Social and psychological aspects of fertility in the United States by James A. Palmore. From Henry P. David and Sung Jin Lee, eds. Social and psychological aspects of fertility in Asia: Proceedings of the technical seminar, Choonchun, Korea, 7–9 November 1973. 1974. (Out of print)

No. 45. Demographic and economic aspects of poverty in the rural Philippines by Aram A. Yengoyan. From Comparative Studies in Society and History, 16(1), 1974. (Out of print)

No. 44. A sociological perspective on family planning programs by Philip M. Hauser. From International Population Conference. Vol. 3. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1973. (Out of print)

No. 43. Psychological determinants of nuptiality by James T. Fawcett. From International Population Conference. Vol. 2. Liege: International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1973. (Out of print)

No. 42. Mercantilism, physiocracy, and population theory by J. Overbeek. From South African Journal of Economics, 41(2), 1973. (Out of print)

No. 41. The diffusion of illegal abortion in Santiago de Chile: The use of a direction-bias model by Gary A. Fuller. From Proceedings of the Association of American Geographers, 5, 1973. (Out of print)

No. 40. Cigarette smoking and widowhood in the United States by Robert D. Retherford. From Population Studies, 27(2), July 1973. (Out of print)

No. 39. In-migration versus fertility as factors in Hawaii’s population growth by Eleanor C. Nordyke. From Hawaii Medical Journal, 32(4), July–August 1973. (Out of print)

No. 38. Population problems of the countries of Asia by Lee-Jay Cho and Monica Fong. From Journal of the East and West Studies, 1, April 1973. (Out of print)

No. 37. A third-year progress report on the West Malaysian Family Survey by Ariffin Bin Marzuki and James A. Palmore. From Proceedings of the Combined Conference on Evaluation of Malaysia National Family Planning Programme and East Asia Population Programmes (18–25 March 1970). 1973. (Out of print)

No. 36. Modernization, individual modernity, and fertility by James T. Fawcett and Marc H. Bornstein. From Psychological perspectives on population. New York: Basic Books, 1973. (Out of print)

No. 35. The value of children: Theory and method by James T. Fawcett and Fred S. Arnold. From Representative Research in Social Psychology, January 1973. (Out of print)

No. 34. Wicksell on population by Johannes Overbeek. From Economic Development and Cultural Change, January 1973. (Out of print)

No. 33. Population aspects of social development by Robert D. Retherford. From Population aspects of social development. United Nations Asian Population Studies Series, No. 11. October 1972. (Out of print)

No. 32. Population change, conjugal status and the family by James A. Palmore. From Population aspects of social development. United Nations Asian Population Studies Series, No. 11. October 1972. (Out of print)

No. 31. Two models for multi-regional population dynamics by Griffith M. Feeney. From Environment and Planning, February 1973. (Out of print)

No. 30. Biological and demographic factors in aboriginal Australian socioeconomic organization by Aram A. Yengoyan. From Oceania, December 1972. (Out of print)

No. 29. A family planning clinic on campus: First year experience at the University of Hawaii by Eleanor Nordyke and Charles B. Odom. From American Journal of Public Health, September 1972. (Out of print)

No. 28. Condom use in Japan by Y. Scott Matsumoto, Akira Koisumi, and Tadahiro Nohara. From Studies in Family Planning, October 1972. (Out of print)

No. 27. Asian universities and population policy. Summary of a conference held on 4–7 April 1972 at Gadjah Mada University, Jogjakarta, Indonesia. From Studies in Family Planning, October 1972. (Out of print)

No. 26. Population trends and economic growth in pre-industrial Japan by Susan B. Hanley and Kozo Yamamura. From D.V. Glass and Roger Revelle, eds., Population and social change. London: Edward Arnold, 1972. (Out of print)

No. 25. Early fertility decline in Austria-Hungary: A lesson in demographic transition by Paul Demeny. From D.V. Glass and Roger Revelle, eds., Population and social change. London: Edward Arnold, 1972. (Out of print)

No. 24. The effects of treponematosis and gonorrhoea on the populations of the Pacific Islands by Peter Pirie. From Oceania, 1(3), February 1972. (Out of print)

No. 23. Toward an analysis of demographic and economic change in Tokugawa Japan: A village study by Susan B. Hanley. From Journal of Asian Studies, 31(3), May 1972. (Out of print)

No. 22. On estimating annual birth rates from census data on children by Lee-Jay Cho. From Proceedings of the American Statistical Association. Social Statistics Section. 1971. (Out of print)

No. 21. Tobacco smoking and the sex morality differential by Robert D. Retherford. From Demography, 9(2), May 1972. (Out of print)

No. 20. The geography of prophylaxis: An example of intuitive schemes and spatial competition in Latin America by Gary A. Fuller. From Antipode, 3(1), November 1971. (Out of print)

No. 19. Economic and demographic influences on the family in Korea by Lee-Jay Cho. From The family in transition. Fogarty International Center Proceedings, No. 3. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. (Out of print)

No. 18. The numbers and distribution of mankind by Nathan Keyfitz. From W.W. Murdoch, ed., Environment: Resources, pollution and society. Stanford, Connecticut: Sinauer Associates, Inc., 1971. (Out of print)

No. 17. Some methods of estimation for statistically underdeveloped areas by Paul Demeny. From The methods and materials of demography. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971. (Out of print)

No. 16. How birth control affects births by Nathan Keyfitz. From Social Biology, 18(2), June 1971. (Out of print)

No. 15. Preliminary estimates of fertility for Korea by Lee-Jay Cho. From Population Index, 37(1), January–March 1971. (Out of print)

No. 14. Linkages of intrinsic to age-specific rates by Nathan Keyfitz. From Journal of the American Statistical Association, 66(334), June 1971. (Out of print)

No. 13. Interpersonal communication and the diffusion of family planning in Malaysia by James A. Palmore, Paul M. Hirsch, and Ariffin bin Marzuki. From Demography, 8(3) August 1971. (Out of print)

No. 12. Zero population growth: A comment by Paul Demeny. From Population Index, 36(4) October–December 1970. (Out of print)

No. 11. The economics of population growth by Paul Demeny. From Rapid population growth. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1971. (Out of print)

No. 10. The leader in family planning and the two-step flow model by Florangel Z. Rosario. From Journalism Quarterly, 48(2), Summer 1971. (Out of print)

No. 9. Hawaii life table values by causes of death: 1959–61 by Chai Bin Park and Y. Scott Matsumoto. From Hawaii Medical Journal, 30(3), May–June 1971. (Out of print)

No. 8. Migration as a means of population control by Nathan Keyfitz. From Population Studies, 25(1), March 1971. (Out of print)

No. 7. Korea: Estimating current fertility from the 1966 census by Lee-Jay Cho. From Studies in Family Planning, 2(3), March 1971. (Out of print)

No. 6. On the momentum of population growth by Nathan Keyfitz. From Demography, 8(1), February 1971. (Out of print)

No. 5. Topics and networks in intra-village communication by John F. Marshall. From Steven Polgar, ed., Culture and population: A collection of current studies. Monograph 9. Chapel Hill: Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, 1971. (Out of print)

No. 4. Class and family in a modernizing society by James A. Palmore, Robert E. Klein, and Ariffin bin Marzuki. From American Journal of Sociology, 76(3), November 1970. (Out of print)

No. 3. Samoa: Two approaches to population and resource problems by Peter N. D. Pirie. From Wilbur Zelinsky, Leszek A. Kosinski, and R. Mansell Prothero, eds., Geography and a crowding world. New York: Oxford University Press, 1970. (Out of print)

No. 2. Causes and consequences of excess fertility by Paul Demeny. From A report on a family planning conference. Monograph No. 7. Chapel Hill: Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1970. (Out of print)

No. 1. A population study in south Guadalcanal: Some results and implications by Murray Chapman. From Oceania, 40(2), December 1969. (Out of print)

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This page is maintained by Sidney B. Westley. It was last updated on 18 November 2004.