Agarwala, S.N.1962Age at Marriage in India. Allahabad :Kitab Mehal.
2.
Anderson, Michael1971Family Structure in Nineteenth Century Lancashire. Cambridge :Cambridge University Press.
3.
1972 "The Study of Family Structure." In E. A. Wrigley, ed., Nineteenth Century Society: Essays in the Use of Quantitative Methods for the Study of Social Data, 47-81. Cambridge :Cambridge University Press.
4.
Andrews, Frank M., James N. Morgan, John A. Sonquist, and Laura Klem1973Multiple Classification Analysis. Second Edition. Ann Arbor, Michigan:Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan .
5.
Aries, Phillipe1948Histoire des populations francaises et de leures attitudes devant la vie depuis le XVIIIE siecle. Paris: Editions Self.
6.
Becker, Gary S.1960"An Economic Analysis of Fertility." In Universities-National Bureau Committee for Economic Research, ed., Demographic and Economic Change in Developed Countries, 209-231. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
7.
1965"A Theory of the Allocation of Time."Economic Journal75:493-517.
8.
1974"A Theory of Social Interactions."Journal of Political Economy82:1063-1093.
9.
Berthoff, Rowland1965 "The Social Order of the Anthracite Region, 1825-1902." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography89:261-291.
10.
Blake, Judith1965 "Demographic Science and the Redirection of Population Policy." In Mindel C. Sheps and Jeanne C. Ridley, eds., Public Health and Population Change, 41-69. Pittsburgh:University of Pittsburgh Press.
Broehl, Wayne G., Jr. 1964The Molly Maguires. Cambridge, Mass.: Vintage-Chelsea House.
13.
Cain, Glen C.1966 Married Women in the Labor Force: An Economic Analysis . Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
14.
Cain, Glen G. and Andriana Weininger1973 "Economics Determinants of Fertility, Results from Cross-Sectional Aggregate Data." Demography10:205-224.
15.
Charles, Enid and Pearl Moshinsky1938"Differential Fertility in England and Wales During the Past Two Decades." In Lancelot Hogben, ed., Political Arithmetic, 106-160. New York:Macmillan.
16.
Coale, Ansley J. and Melvin Zeinik1963New Estimates of Fertility and Population in the United States: A Study of Annual White Births from 1855 to 1960 and of Completeness of Enumeration in the Censuses from 1880 to 1960. Princeton :Princeton University Press.
17.
Davis, Kingsley1967 "Population Policy: Will Current Programs Succeed?" Science158:730-739.
18.
Davis, Kingsley and Judith Blake 1956 "Social Structure and Fertility ." Economic Development and Cultural Change4: 211-235.
19.
Easterlin, Richard A.1971 "Does Human Fertility Adjust to the Environment ?" American Economic Review61:399-407.
20.
1973The Economics and Sociology of Fertility: A Synthesis. Paper for the Seminar on Early Industrialization, Shifts in Fertility, and Changes in Family Structure. Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J. Revised version, July, 1973.
21.
1976"Population Change and Farm Settlement in the Northern United States."Journal of Economic History36:45-75.
22.
---- Population Issues in American Economic History: A Survey and Critique. In Robert E. Bullman, ed., Recent Developments in the Study of Business and Economic History: Essays in Honor of Herman E. Krooss (forthcoming). Greenwich, Conn.: Johnson Associates.
23.
Easterlin, Richard A., George Alter, and Gretchen Condron1974Farm and Farm Families in Old and New Areas: The Northern States in 1860. Revised version of paper presented at the MSSB Summer Conference on Historical Demography . Williamstown, Mass., July 14-27, 1974 .
24.
England and Wales Registrar General1886Forty-ninth Annual Report.
25.
1923Census of England and Wales: 1911, Vol. 13, Fertility of Marriage, Part II. London: H. M. S. O.
26.
Forster, Colin and G.S.L. Tucker1972Economic Opportunity and White American Fertility Ratios, 1800-1860. New Haven: Yale University Press.
27.
France, Ministere du Travail et de la Prevoyance Sociale1918Statistique générale de la France. Statistique des familles et des habitations en 1911. Paris: Imprimerie Nationale.
28.
Friedlander, Dov1973 "Demographic Patterns and Socioeconomic Characteristics of the Coal Mining Population in England and Wales in the Nineteenth Century ." Economic Development and Cultural Change22:39-51.
29.
Girard, Alain1955Aspects statistiques du probleme familial. In Colloques Internationaux du Centre National de al Recherche Scientifique. Sociologie Comparee de la famille contemporaire. Paris .
30.
Glass, D.V.1938"Changes in Fertility in England and Wales, 1851-1931." In Lancelot Hogben, ed., Political Arithmetic, 161-212. London: George Allen and Unwin.
31.
Goldberger, Arthur1964Econometric Theory. New York: Wiley.
32.
Goldstein, Sidney
33.
1972"The Influence of Labor Force Participation and Education on Fertility in Thailand."Population Studies26:419-436.
34.
Great Britain, General Register Office1951Census: 1951, England and Wales. Fertility Report. London:H. M. S. O.
35.
1966Census: 1961, England and Wales. Fertility Tables. London:H. M. S. O.
36.
Haines, Michael1975Fertility and Occupation: Coal Mining Populations in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries in Europe and America. Cornell University Western Societies Program Occasional Paper No. 3. Ithaca, N.Y.
37.
1976Industrial Work and the Family Cycle, 1889-90. Paper presented at the Cliometrics Conference, Madison, Wisconsin, April 22-24, 1976.
38.
---- Fertility, Nuptiality, and Occupation: A Study of Coal Mining Populations and Regions in England and Wales in the Mid-Nineteenth Century. The Journal of Interdisciplinary History (Forthcoming).
39.
Hajnal, John1953 "Age at Marriage and Proportions Marrying." Population Studies7:111-136.
40.
Hareven, Tamara and Maris A. Vinovskis1975 Marital Fertility, Ethnicity and Occupation in Urban Families: An Analysis of South Boston and the South End in 1880. Journal of Social History3:69-93.
41.
Harvey, Katherine A.1969The Best Dressed Miners: Life and Labor in the Maryland Coal Region, 1835-1910. Ithaca, NY: Comell University Press.
42.
Hershberg, Theodore, Michael Katz, Stuart Blumin, Laurence Glasco, and Clyde Griffen1974"Occupation and Ethnicity in Five Nineteenth Century Cities: A Collaborative Inquiry."Historical Methods Newsletter7: 174-216.
43.
Hewitt, Margaret1958Wives and Mothers in Victorian Industry. London:Radeliff.
44.
Himes, Norman E.1936Medical History of Contraception. New York:Wilkens.
45.
Innes, J.W.1938Class Fertility Differentials in England and Wales, 1876-1934 . Princeton:Princeton University Press.
46.
Jaffe, A.J. and K. Azumi1960 "The Birth Rate and Cottage Industries in Underdeveloped Countries." Economic Development and Cultural Change9:52-63.
47.
Kasarda, John D.1971 "Economic Structure and Fertility: A Comparative Analysis ." Demography8:307-317.
48.
Knodel, John1974The Decline of Fertility in Germany, 1871-1939. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
49.
Laslett, Peter1972"Introduction." In Peter Laslett and Richard Wall, eds., Household and Family in Past Time, 1-89. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
50.
Lebergott, Stanley1964Manpower in Economic Growth: The American Record Since 1800. New York: McGraw-Hill.
51.
Leet, Don R.1976 "The Determinants of Fertility Transition in Ante-Bellum Ohio." The Journal of Economic History36:359-378.
52.
Lewis, Brian1971Coal Mining in the Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries. London:Longman Group, Ltd.
53.
Massachusetts, Bureau of Statistics of Labor1888Census of Massachusetts: 1885. I. Population and Social Statistics. Boston.
54.
Mincer, Jacob1962"Labor Force Participation of Married Women." In Universities—National Bureau Committee for Economic Research , ed., Aspects of Labor Economics, 63-97. Princeton :Princeton University Press.
55.
1963 "Market Prices, Opportunity Costs, and Income Effects." In Carl F. Christ, ed., Measurement in Economics: Studies in Mathematical Economics and Econometrics in Honor of Yehuda Grunfeld, 67-82. Stanford:Stanford University Press.
56.
Modell, John and Tamara K. Hareven1973 "Urbanization and the Malleable Household: An Examination of Boarding and Lodging in American Families." Journal of Marriage and the Family35:467-479.
57.
Ogburn, William F.1912Progress and Uniformity in Child-Labor Legislation: A Study in Statistical Measurement. New York:Longmans, Green and Co.
58.
Okun, Bernard1958Trends in Birth Rates in the United States Since 1870. Baltimore:Johns Hopkins Press.
59.
Preston, Samuel1972"Female Employment Policy and Fertility." In Robert Parke, Jr. and Charles Westoff, eds., Aspects of Population Growth Policy, Volume VI, 375-393. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
60.
Redford, Arthur1964Labour Migration in England, 1800-1850. Second ed. Edited and revised by W. H. Chaloner. Manchester, England :Manchester University Press.
61.
Roberts, Peter1901The Anthracite Coal Industry: A Study of the Economic Conditions and Relations of the Cooperative Forces in the Development of the Anthracite Coal Industry of Pennsylvania. New York:Macmillan .
62.
1904Anthracite Coal Communities: A Study of the Demography, the Social, Educational and Moral Life of the Anthracite Regions. New York:Macmillan.
63.
Schultz, Theodore W., ed. 1975Economics of the Family: Marriage, Children and Human Capital. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
64.
Simonin, L.1868Underground Life or Mines and Miners.
65.
Steams, Peter N.1970- "National Character and European Labor 71 History." The Journal of Social History4: 95-124.
66.
Sweet, James A.1973Women in the Labor Force. New York: Seminar Press.
67.
United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs1953The Determinants and Consequences of Population Trends . New York:United Nations.
68.
U.S. Bureau of the Census1892U.S. Census of Population: 1890. Report on Mineral Industries in the United States, 1889. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
69.
1943 a U.S. Census of Population: 1940. Vol. III. The Labor Force . Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
70.
1943 b U.S. Census of Population: 1940. Differential Fertility, 1940 and 1910: Fertility for States and Large Cities. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
71.
1960Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1957. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
72.
1964U.S. Census of Population: 1960. Subject Reports. Women by Number of Children Ever Born. PC(2)-3A. Washington, D.C. : Government Printing Office.
73.
1972U.S. Census of Population: 1970. Subject Reports. Marital Status. PC(2)-4C. Washington, D.C.:Govemment Printing Office.
74.
1973 a U.S. Census of Population: 1970. Subject Reports. Women by Number of Children Ever Born. PC(2)-3A. Washington, D.C. : Government Printing Office.
75.
1973b Population and Housing Inquiries in U.S. Decennial Censuses, 1790-1970. Working Paper No. 39. Washington, D.C.:Government Printing Office.
76.
U.S. Commissioner of Labor1890Sixth Annual Report. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
77.
1891Seventh Annual Report. Washington, D.C. : Government Printing Office.
78.
Van de Walle, Etienne1968"Marriage and Marital Fertility."Daedalus97:486-501.
79.
Vinovskis, Maris 1976 "Socioeconomic Determinants of Interstate Fertility Differentials in the United States in 1850 and 1860." The Journal of Interdisciplinary History6:375-396.
80.
Wright, Carroll D. and William C. Hunt1900The History and Growth of the United States Census. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
81.
Wrigley, E.A.1961Industrial Growth and Population Change: A Regional Study of the Coalfield Areas of Northwest Europe in the Later Nineteenth Century. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.
82.
Yasuba, Yasukichi1962Birth Rates of the White Population of the United States, 1800-1860: An Economic Analysis. Baltimore:Johns Hopkins Press.
83.
Yearley, Clifton K., Jr. 1962Enterprise and Anthracite: Economics and Democracy in Schuylkill County 1820-1875. Baltimore: John Hopkins Press.