Displaying Publications 6061 - 6087 of 6087 in total
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Life-cycle income and motherhood: simulations for British women of the 1990s
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Gender equity and low pay: a note based on Britain
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Committee on Advanced Research at Essex: British Panel Study at Essex
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Glass ceilings or sticky floors?
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Friendship: the social glue of contemporary society?
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Single professional women who 'go for it'
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Politics and society: analyzing cleavages in democracy by examining British households
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Abbey National savings insight
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Relating people by computer
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The impact of local labour market conditions on school leaving decisions
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All in the Family British Style: Does Family Smoking Cause British Youth to Smoke?
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All in the Family British Style: Does Family Smoking Cause British Youth to Smoke?
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All in the Family British Style: Does Family Smoking Cause British Youth to Smoke?
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All in the family British style: does family smoking cause British youth to smoke?
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Experiments with methods to reduce attrition in longitudinal surveys
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The total survey error paradigm and pre-election polls: the case of the 2006 Italian general elections
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All in the Family British Style: Does Family Smoking Cause British Youth to Smoke?
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Estimating the small area effects of austerity measures in the UK
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Consistency of Reports of Party Affiliation and Voting Behaviour - Lessons From a UK Panel Study
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On decomposing the causes of changes in income-related health inequality with longitudinal data
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Consenting to Health Record Linkage: Evidence from the British Household Panel Survey
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Two Mini-seminars on `Consent to data linkage'
Emanuela Sala, Jonathan Burton, Gundi Knies, et al.
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Interviewer Effects on Consenting to Data Linkage on a Longitudinal Survey of a General Population
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On the individual and social determinants of neighbourhood satisfaction and attachment
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The effect of diversity on wellbeing
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Socioeconomic inequalities in health dynamics: a comparative analysis of panel data from Britain, Denmark, Germany and the US
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The relationships between income, deprivation and "poverty": longitudinal and cross-national perspectives