Go to:
Search item
This is a sortable list showing all publications by researchers from the Federal Institute for Population Research (BiB).
Search results 531 to 540 from a total of 2,223 for search item " "
Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (Ed.) (2021):
Bevölkerungsforschung Aktuell 4/2021.
Wiesbaden.
Bujard, Martin; von den Driesch, Ellen; Ruckdeschel, Kerstin, Laß, Inga; Thönnissen, Carolin; Schumann, Almut; Schneider, Norbert F. (2021):
Belastungen von Kindern, Jugendlichen und Eltern in der Corona-Pandemie.
BiB.Bevölkerungs.Studien 2/2021. Wiesbaden: Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung.
Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (Ed.) (2022):
Jahresbericht 2021. Forschen | Beraten | Informieren.
Ghislandi, Simone; Muttarak, Raya; Sauerberg, Markus; Scotti, Benedetta (2021):
Human costs of the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in the major epicenters in Italy.
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research 20: 1–32.
News from the front: Estimation of excess mortality and life expectancy in the major epicenters of the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy.
MedRxiv: The Preprint Server for Health Science 06/2020.
Kuber, Aditi; Reuter, Anna; Geldsetzer, Pascal; Chimbindi, Natsayi; Moshabela, Mosa; Tanser, Frank; Bärnighausen, Till; Vollmer, Sebastian (2021):
The effect of eligibility for antiretroviral therapy on body mass index and blood pressure in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Scientific Reports, 11: 14718.
Reuter, Anna (2021):
ODKEXPORT: Stata module to export xlsForms to readable docx or xlsx files, Statistical Software Components.
IDEAS.
Décieux, Jean Philippe (2021):
The Dialectic of Transnational Integration and National Disintegration as Challenge for Multilevel Governance.
Social Sciences 10(7): 263.
Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung (2021):
Globale Bevölkerungsentwicklung. Fakten und Trends.
BiB.Bevölkerungs.Studien 1/2021. Wiesbaden: Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung.
Schmitz, Sophia; Spieß, C. Katharina (2021):
The intergenerational transmission of gender norms - why and how adolescent males with working mothers matter for female labour market outcomes.
Socio-Economic Review 20. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 281–322.
You are here: