<<
>>

Bibliography

Arriaga, Eduardo. 1968. New life tables for Latin Ameri­can populations in the nineteenth and twentieth centu­ries. University of California, Institute of Interna­tional Studies, Population Monograph Ser.

No. 3. Berkeley.

Condran, Gretchen, and Eileen Crimmins. 1979. A descrip­tion and evaluation of mortality data in the federal census: 1850-1900. Historical Methods 12: 1-22.

Crimmins, Eileen. 1980. The completeness of 1900 mortal­ity data collected by registration and enumeration for rural and urban parts of states: Estimates using the Chandra Sekar-Deming technique. Historical Meth­ods 13: 163-9.

Erhardt, Carl, and Joyce Berlin, eds. 1974. Mortality and morbidity in the United States. Cambridge, Mass.

Graunt, John. 1662. Natural and political observations mentioned in a following index, and made upon the bills of mortality. London.

Haines, Michael, and Roger Avery. 1980. The American life table of 1830-1860: An evaluation. Journal of Interdisciplinary History 11: 71—95.

Henry, Louis. 1956. Anciennes families geneυoises. Paris.

Hollingsworth, T. H. 1964. The demography of the British peerage. Population Studies, suppl. 18(2).

MacKellar, Landis. 1987. U.S. adult white crude death and net migration rates, by state, in 1850. In Proceedings of the Middle States Division of the Association of American Geographers, New York, New York, October 17-18, 1986, ed. Cathy Kelly and George Rengert, 66-72. Philadelphia.

Manton, Kenneth, and Eric Stallard. 1984. Recent trends in mortality analysis. New York.

Marks, E., W. Seltzer, and K. Krotki. 1974. Population growth estimation: A handbook of vital statistics mea­surement. New York.

Preston, Samuel. 1976. Mortality patterns in national popu­lations, with special reference to recorded causes of death. New York.

Preston, Samuel, Nathan Keyfitz, and Robert Schoen.

1972. Causes of death: Life tables for national popula­tions. New York.

Short, Thomas. 1750. New observations on city, town, and country bills of mortality. London.

Shryock, Henry, and Jacob Siegal. 1980. The methods and materials of demography. Washington, D.C.

United Nations, 1983. Manual on indirect methods of demo­graphic estimation. New York.

U.S. Bureau of the Census. 1923. Mortality rates: 1910—20. Washington, D.C.

1933. Introduction to vital statistics of the United States: 1900-1930. Washington, D.C.

U.S. Bureau of the Census and Library of Congress. 1943a. Vital statistics rates in the United States: 1900—40. Washington, D.C.

1943b. General Censusesand vital statistics in the Ameri­cas. Washington, D.C.

1946. National censuses and vital statistics in Europe: 1918-1939. Washington, D.C.

U.S. Public Health Service. 1961. Guide to United States life tables: 1900—1959. Public Health Service Publica­tion No. 1086, Public Health Bibliography Ser. No. 42. Washington, D.C.

Vinovkis, Maris. 1971. The 1789 life table of Edward Wig- glesworth. Journal of Economic History 31: 570—91.

1972. Mortality rates and trends in Massachusetts be­fore 1860. Journal of Economic History 32: 184-213.

Wrigley, E.A. 1968. Mortality in pre-industrial England: The case of Colyton1 Devon, over three centuries. Dae­dalus 97: 246-80.

1969. Population and history. New York.

<< | >>
Source: Kiple Kenneth F. (Editor). The Cambridge World History of Human Disease. Cambridge University Press,1993. — 1200 p.. 1993

More on the topic Bibliography: