Mortality in the Greek Community of Odessa in 1800–1920
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Дата
2021
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Анотація
Mortality is the second important demographic process after fertility. Studies in
mortality as a constituent part of biometry focus on how deaths influence a population,
its size and structure. Mortality is generally referred to as a process of extinction of a
generation and perceived as a mass statistical process composed of a number of
individual deaths coming at different ages and defining in their totality a sequence of
extinction of a real or a conditional generation. As a category of historic demographic
process it implies examination of “a mass process composed of a number of individual
deaths coming at different ages and defining in their totality a sequence of extinction of
a real or a conditional generation”1 or is referred to as “frequency of incidents of death
in a social environment”.2 Together with fertility, mortality shapes natural movement
(reproduction) of a population.
Опис
Ключові слова
Mortality, Greek Community, Odessa
Бібліографічний опис
Port-Cities of the Northern Shore of the Black Sea : Institutional, Economic and Social Development, 18th – early 20th Centuries. Black Sea History Working Papers, vol. 2. / Evrydiki Sifneos, Oksana Υurkova and Valentina Shandra (eds). – Rethymnon: the Centre of Maritime History 2021.