Age group ; Cause of death ; Demographic change ; Demographic structure ; Demography ; Gender difference ; Madrid ; Male overmortality ; Morbidity ; Mortality ; Population ageing ; Spain
Demographic behaviour ; Demographic transition ; Demography ; Developing countries ; Economic crisis ; Family ; Fertility ; Life expectancy ; Modernization ; Poverty ; Theory ; Third World ; World
Comparative study ; Demographic change ; Demographic structure ; France ; Japan ; Paris ; Population density ; Socio-economic system ; Spatial structure ; Tokyo ; Urban area ; Urban population ; Urban structure
Demographic analysis ; Demography ; Economic impact ; Family ; Income transfer ; Life cycle ; Life expectancy ; Model ; Mortality ; Population ageing ; Statistics ; Welfare
Cultural studies ; Demographic change ; Ethnicity ; Hispanics ; Immigration ; Linguistic minority ; Population ; United States of America
The Hispanic population in the USA has increased from approximately one million in 1930 to ca. 32 million in 1997. Evolution of this population - not all of whom still speak Spanish - is discussed through the twentieth century in terms
Birth control ; Demographic change ; Demographic structure ; Demographic transition ; Demography ; Fertility ; Health ; International migration ; Mortality ; Population ; Population distribution ; Population growth ; Urban growth ; Urbanization
Demographic structure ; Ethnic community ; Exurban settlement ; Labour market ; Minority ; Residential mobility ; Suburbanization ; United States of America ; Urban immigration
The analysis of its urban functions is associated with a thorough observation of the demographic evolution occurred in the town in the last decades, of the industrialization level and of the tertiary sector in its surroundings. Functionally