|
|
|
||
Last update: prof. RNDr. Jitka Rychtaříková, CSc. (02.07.2021)
|
|
||
Last update: prof. RNDr. Jitka Rychtaříková, CSc. (02.07.2021)
References: Dějiny obyvatelstva českých zemí, Mladá fronta Praha 1996 M.Kučera: Populace České republiky 1918-1991, Acta Demographica, Praha 1994 V.Srb: 1000 let obyvatelstva českých zemí, Karolinum 2004 Populační vývoj České republiky 2001-2006, PřF UK Katedra demografie a geodemografie, Praha 2007 Population Development in the Czech Republic 2007, SLON 2009 Demografická situace České republiky: Proměny a kontexty SLON Praha, 2010 Články v časopisech Demografie; http://www.czso.cz/csu/redakce.nsf/i/demografie Acta Demographica; http://www.natur.cuni.cz/geografie/demografie-a-geodemografie/ceska-demograficka-spolecnost/publikace Acta Geographica; http://web.natur.cuni.cz/gis/aucg/ aj. |
|
||
Last update: prof. RNDr. Jitka Rychtaříková, CSc. (02.07.2021)
|
|
||
Last update: prof. RNDr. Jitka Rychtaříková, CSc. (02.07.2021)
1) Population of Czech lands before WWI (fertility, mortality, migrations, census 1910 – population structures). The impact of the First World War on demographic developments (reproduction losses, age structure). 2) Population trends in the period 1918-1937 (First Republic); economic and social conditions, demographic structures (census 1921 and 1930) and vital statistics indicators developments. 3) Population trends in 1938-1945. Political and economic situation. The German occupation of the borderland (Sudetenland): three populations – Czechs in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, Germans in the Protectorate, population of the Sudetenland. Factors of the differential rise in nuptiality and fertility indicators. 4) Demographic and other population structures (censuses 1950-2011), spatial distribution and structure of municipalities, population structure according to age, marital status, and socio-economic composition (employment of women), education, nationality including Roma ethnicity, and religion denomination. 5) Marriage and divorce rates, first marriages, remarriages, divorces, quantum, timing, and structures. Legislation, cross-sectional and cohort perspectives. Trends in marriage and divorce rates. 6) Fertility and reproduction rates, marital and extramarital fertility, child‘s birth order, family size, differential fertility. Cross-sectional and cohort perspectives. Households and families, fundamental trends. 7) Abortions (types). Legislation, quantum, timing, and structures (age, marital status, number of previous children). Family planning and contraception. Trends. 8) Mortality, sex and age differentials, infant and perinatal mortality. Trends based on life table functions. Differential mortality, medical causes of death. 9) New trends of demographic behaviour since 1989. 10) Population forecast (trends, change in age structure, economic and social consequences). 11) Population ageing: factors and consequences.
|