11 research outputs found

    Bowling Together: Scientific Collaboration Networks of Demographers at European Population Conferences

    Get PDF
    Studies of collaborative networks of demographers are relatively scarce. Similar studies in other social sciences provide insight into scholarly trends of both the fields and characteristics of their successful scientists. Exploiting a unique database of metadata for papers presented at six European Population Conferences, this report explores factors explaining research collaboration among demographers. We find that (1) collaboration among demographers has increased over the past 10 years, however, among co-authored papers, collaboration across institutions remains relatively unchanged over the period, (2) papers based on core demographic subfields such as fertility, mortality, migration and data and methods are more likely to involve multiple authors and (3) multiple author teams that are all female are less likely to co-author with colleagues in different institutions. Potential explanations for these results are discussed alongside comparisons with similar studies of collaboration networks in other related social sciences

    Germplasm

    No full text

    The Employment Relationship and Inequality: How and Why Changes in Employment Practices are Reshaping Rewards in Organizations

    No full text

    Antecedents and Consequences of Faculty Women’s Academic–Parental Role Balancing

    No full text
    Academia, Interrole conflict, Interrole facilitation, Parenting, Role balancing,
    corecore