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Overview
  • New York City Study of the Social and Demographic Consequences of Teenage Childbearing, 1973-1976

    Investigators: Harriet B. Presser

    Publication Date: March 23, 2016

New York City Study of the Social and Demographic Consequences of Teenage Childbearing, 1973-1976 New York City Study of the Social and Demographic Consequences of Teenage Childbearing, 1973-1976

About This Product

This study may be described as a follow-back survey of three first-parity cohorts of New York City women: 310 women aged 15-29 who had their first birth in July of 1970, 1971 or 1972. It investigates the relationship between women's roles and fertility, focusing on the age at which women had their first child. In particular, it seeks to determine some of the distinctive role-related aspects of teenage childbearing and childrearing relative to those who postpone motherhood until their twenties. Data for the analysis is a longitudinal study (1973-1976) in three boroughs of New York City, conducted in three waves of interviews. Although the longitudinal period between interviews is only three years, retrospective and prospective questions asked during the interviews permit analysis of the span from early childhood to middle age. Note for users of DAAPPP Data Sets #01-B1DAAPPP data sets 01 through B1 are comprised of a User's Guide, SPSS syntax files (*.SPS or *.SPX) and raw data files only. Most of these datasets contain SPSS syntax files that use Job Control Language (JCL) from 1980s versions of SPSS-X. Because the syntax is old, the syntax files require editing to conform to the current syntax standards used by SPSS/Windows or SPSS/Unix. If you require technical assistance in using or editing these syntax files, please contact Sociometrics' Data Support Group at 800.846.3475 or socio@socio.com.
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User's Guide and Instructions
  • dap9697 Instructions and Information
  • dap9697 User's Guide
  • DDI XML Codebook
dap9697
  • dap9697 Raw File
  • dap9697 SPSS Program Statements
Other Documentation
  • dap9697 Other Documentation File 1
Product Details
  • 1,059 variables
  • 310 subjects
  • Raw Data, SPSS Program Statements, and Instrument
  • User’s Guide to the Machine-Readable Files and Documentation
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