An observation of a socioeconomic system from the viewpoint of living standard
This study tries to analyze and assess the living standard (the degree of satisfaction) including subjective and psychological aspects from a socioeconomic viewpoint integrating the conventional monetary economic approach and non monetary social
Socioeconomic characteristics of interregional migrants in England and Wales, 1939-71
The source of information on region in 1939 is from a national population register. Data from the Longitudinal Study of the Office of Population Censuses are used. Migrants tended to be socioeconomically advantaged compared with nonmigrants. Those
A framework for the areal interpolation of socioeconomic data
Methods of basis change for socioeconomic data are reviewed and are seen to differ in the assumptions made in each about underlying density surfaces. These methods are extended to more general cases, and an illustration is provided by using
Socioeconomic viewpoints on highland-lowland systems : a case study on the northwest side of Mount Kenya
Farmers who to semi-arid Laikipia District maintain humid land-use practices unsuitable to this zone. Interview surveys of household strategies of small-scale farmers and off-farm employment opportunities point to the need for a socioeconomic
Survey of the socioeconomic structure of US agriculture in the mid eighties. Proceeding from the development of the number of farms and the farming population it presents a new socioeconomic classification of the farm sector. The results
are then summarized in a synopsis of the socioeconomic structure of the farm sector. - (EG)
The socioeconomic impact of shared appreciation mortgages on borrowers : empirical evidence from South Australia
This article analyses the socioeconomic impact of shared appreciation mortgages (SAM) on borrowers through empirical evidence from South Australia. To do so, it examines a dataset of low-income SAM-financed households and finds that they benefit
Socioeconomic factors and agro-forestry improvments in the hills of Nepal
into consideration socioeconomic factors such as the security of access to resources, livelihood strategies, gender roles and division of labor, family member allocation of income and farm products, technological adaptation, local knowledge, and communication