JULIE DaVANZO

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JULIE DaVANZO
Office:
RAND Corporation
1776 Main Street
Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138
Tel.: 310-393-0411 x7516
Email: julie@rand.org
Residence:
16541 Akron Street
Pacific Palisades, CA 90272
Tel.: 310-454-8849; Mobile: 310-795-4650
EDUCATION
University of California, Los Angeles
Ph.D., Economics (1972)
M.A., Economics (1968)
B.A., Economics (1967) (summa cum laude)
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
Teaching
Each spring 2008-present: Lecturer, University of California, Irvine (course on making effective
presentations about research, to Masters students in the Demographic and Social
Analysis [DASA] program; in 2014 I also worked with 19 students in the Masters
of Public Policy Program and with one Sociology PhD student)
Spring 2012, Fall and Spring 2010, and Fall 2008: Lecturer, University of California, Los Angeles
(senior seminar on Population and Development in the International Development
Studies program)
August-September, 2009: Visiting Fellow, Australian National University (taught short
course/workshop to PhD students on making presentations on research)
Fall 2008 and Fall 2006: Lecturer, Pardee RAND Graduate School (course on Demography)
Winter 2008 and Winter 2007: Lecturer, University of California, Irvine (writing course on population
issues in the Economics Department)
Research and Administration
Sept. - Oct. 2012: Visiting Fellow, Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Bologna
Oct. - Nov. 2007:
Visiting Fellow, Australian National University
April 2006 - Present: Adjunct staff, RAND
2003- 2005:
Co-director, RAND Evaluation Institute for Qatar K-12 Education Reform
Project
2001- 2006:
Director of RAND Postdoctoral Training Programs in Population and Aging
(funded by NICHD and NIA)
1996 - 2006:
Director, Population Matters Project, RAND
1983 - 2005:
Director, Center for the Study of the Family in Economic Development, RAND
1979 -1991:
Associate Director of RAND’s Population Research Center
1972 - March 2006: Staff Member, RAND, Santa Monica, California (most recently Senior
Economist)
1968-1972:
Research Assistant, RAND
Dr. DaVanzo has conducted various studies of the socioeconomic determinants and consequences of
demographic phenomena. These include:
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Design and fielding of the original Malaysian Family Life Survey (MFLS-1), a three-round
multipurpose survey of over 1200 households in Peninsular Malaysia, a dataset that has been
widely used by researchers throughout the world.
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The design and fielding of the Second Malaysian Family Life Survey (a follow-up of MFLS-1
respondents and their children and new random samples of households with women of childbearing
age and of households with persons age 50 and over).
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Analyses of time allocation and income distribution in Malaysia.
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Studies of birthspacing, contraceptive use, breastfeeding, birthweight, and infant mortality in
Malaysia.
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Studies of family migration decisions and of return and repeat migration in the U.S.
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Studies of young adults’ decisions to leave their parents’ homes and establish independent
households in the U.S. and of their decisions to return to live with their parents.
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Studies of breastfeeding and infant feeding in the United States, Malaysia, Indonesia, and
Cameroon.
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Design, fielding, and analysis of a survey of Filipino and Salvadoran immigrants in Los Angeles.
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Review of trends and policy issues regarding American families.
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A survey/research project on the effects of the Grameen Bank on women’s status and their fertility
in Bangladesh.
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A review of demographic trends in Russia and their implications.
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A study of the effects of the economic crisis in Cameroon on schooling inequalities in that country.
(A paper on this work won the 2005 Joyce Cain Award from the Comparative and International
Education Society [CIES].)
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Analyses of the interrelations between demographics and security in South Asia and Southeast
Asia.
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A study of the implications of demographic change in Europe.
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A study comparing the demographics of China and India and their implications.
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Research on the effects of pregnancy spacing on infant, child, and maternal health outcomes in
Bangladesh.
Dr. DaVanzo recently completed an evaluation of the Hewlett Foundation initiative on Population,
Reproductive Health, and Economic Development (“PopPov). She is working on a project on
pregnancy termination in Bangladesh. She has directed the Population Matters, which seeks to
communicate the policy-relevant results of population research to policymakers, the media, and general
audiences. She has presented Population Matters and other research to the staffs of a number of
Congressional offices, at a number of briefings on Capitol Hill, in a number of radio and television
interviews (including on National Public Radio, the BBC, and ABC World News), and has briefed
current and former Cabinet members, including Henry Kissinger, Donald Rumsfeld, and Paul O’Neill.
Between 2001 and 2006 Dr. DaVanzo directed RAND’s NICHD and NIA post-doctoral training
programs in population and aging. She has taught at UCLA, the Pardee RAND Graduate School of
Policy Studies, and UC Irvine and has supervised the work of a number of pre- and post-doctoral
fellows and visiting scholars.
Dr. DaVanzo has been principal investigator of over 30 projects, funded by the National Institute of
Child Health and Human Development; the National Institute on Aging; the U.S. Agency for
International Development; the Rockefeller Foundation; the United Nations Fund for Population
Activities; the Ford Foundation; the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation; the S.H. Cowell
Foundation; the David and Lucile Packard Foundation; the Compton Foundation; the Employment and
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Training Administration, Department of Labor; the Economic Development Administration,
Department of Commerce; and the World Bank.
Dr. DaVanzo is a National Associate of the National Academies of Sciences (NAS) and has been
involved in a number of NAS activities. Since 2012 she has been a member of advisory committee for
DBASSE (Division of Behavioral and Social Sciences and Education). She was a member of the NAS
Committee on National Statistics (CNSTAT, 1995-2001), a member of the NAS Panel to Evaluate the
USDA’s Methodology for Estimating Eligibility and Participation for the WIC Program (2000-03),
and chaired a CNSTAT workshop on Measurement of and Research on Time Use. She has served as a
report review coordinator for several NAS reports and has reviewed a number of other Academy
reports. She was a member of the NAS Committee on Population (1985–91) and served as co-chair of
the NAS Working Group on the Health Consequences of Contraceptive Use and Controlled Fertility
(1987-90) and was a member of the NAS Panel on Determinants of Fertility Change (1978–83).
She has been a consultant to the Population Reference Bureau to help Population and Poverty Research
Initiative (PopPov) fellows develop presentations on their research, the UNFPA (United Nations
Population Fund) office in Albania for a project to do further analyses of data from the Demographic
and Health Survey in that country, to Pathfinder International for several projects in Bangladesh, and to
Cornell University for a project in Cameroon. She was recently a consultant to the UNFPA and
UNICEF offices in Kosovo for a project to field and analyze data from a demographic and health
survey in Kosovo. She is currently a member of the Board of Directors of the Population Resource
Center. She was a member of the Technical Advisory Group for the MEASURE Evaluation Project at
the University of North Carolina and of the Scientific Advisory Committee for the Demographic and
Health Surveys (DHS) Project from its inception in 1985 until 1994 and was its chairperson from 1991
to 1994.
She has conducted several large program reviews, including reviews of World Bank research on
women in development (for the World Bank Latin American and Caribbean Technical Department), of
the NAS Committee on Population (for USAID), and of the Community Health and Family Planning
Project of the Navrongo Health Research Centre (for the Rockefeller Foundation).
She has been a consultant to ORC Macro International, the United Nations Population Division, and
the World Bank. She served as a member of the Population Research Committee of the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development (1981–85) and has subsequently participated in a
number of reviews of proposals submitted to NIH (most recently chairing a special review in March
2006 serving as a reviewer for two study sections of proposals submitted to the Fogarty International
Center, and participating in a review of NIA training grant applications). In addition, she has been a
consultant to the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations, UNICEF, the Population Council, and the
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP); has served as a resource person
at the Summer Seminar in Population at the East-West Population Institute (1979); as a visiting scholar
at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Laxenburg, Austria (IIASA) (1980); and
testified before the U.S. House of Representatives Select Committee on Population (1978) and the
Congressional Coalition on Population and Development (1990).
She was First Vice-President of the Population Association of America (PAA) (1989) and has served as
Second Vice President (1987) of the PAA, on the selection committee for the PAA Dorothy S. Thomas
award (1984–87, Chair 1987) and on the PAA Publications Committee (1979–81), was chairperson of
the Nominations Committee (1985), a member of the PAA Board of Directors (1982–84), a member
of the Program Committee for the 1981, 1994, and 1998 PAA meetings and the Local Arrangements
Committee for the 2006 meeting, and was a member and chair of the PAA International Affairs
Committee (1994-97) and a poster judge at the PAA meeting in 2007.
She collaborated for many years with the staffs of the National Population and Family Development
Board (NPFDB) of Malaysia and of Lembaga Demografi (the Demographic Institute) and The Center
for Health Research at the University of Indonesia; she has also worked with researchers at Instituto
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Mexicano del Seguro Social (IMSS, the Mexican Social Security Institute) and Instituto Nacional de
Salud Publica (INSP, National Institute of Public Health) in Mexico. She was an invited lecturer at
Nucleo de Estudos de Populacão in Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil (1983), and a visiting professor at the
University of Malaya (1986). She organized and directed the workshop on Multivariate Statistical
Analysis in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, in 1986, and workshops on the Second Malaysian Family Life
Survey at NPFDB and the University of Malaya in 1991. In 1993, she delivered a series of lectures on
analyzing migration and conducting policy analyses at the Center of Demography and Human Ecology
at the Institute for Economic Forecasting of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow. She helped
organize a workshop on “Russia’s Demographic ‘Crisis,’” held at RAND in June 1995. She helped
organize a workshop on “Mortality in Russia: Major Risk Groups,” held in Moscow in April 1996, and
helped brief representatives of various government agencies and international donors on the main
conclusions. She has been a visiting fellow at the Australian National University and the University of
Bologna.
She was co-editor of Research in Population Economics, Vol. II, and has been an editorial consultant
to a number of journals, including Science, The American Economic Review, Journal of Political
Economy, The Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of Development Economics, Economic
Development and Cultural Change, Demography, Population and Development Review, The
American Sociological Review, Studies in Family Planning, Journal of Health Economics, Journal of
Human Resources, Journal of the American Statistical Association, Journal of Econometrics, Journal
of Business and Economic Statistics, International Family Planning Perspectives, The International
Migration Review, Social Science and Medicine, Social Biology, and Journal of Marriage and the
Family.
PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS/HONORS
Joyce Cain Award, for Distinguished Research on African Descendants, from the Comparative and
International Education Society [CIES], 2005
Bronze Merit Award, RAND, 2003
National Associate, National Academies of Sciences (since 2002)
President’s Award, RAND, 1996
Member, Population Association of America
Member, International Union for the Scientific Study of Population
Ranked Second among Nonacademic Women Economists and in Top-Ten of All Women Economists
in Terms of Average Annual Number of Citations (Journal of Business and Economics, February
1990).
Ford Foundation Grant for Research in University Administration, 1970–1971
Rockefeller Fellowship in Economic Demography, 1971–1972
Phi Beta Kappa, 1967
PUBLICATIONS
DaVanzo, Julie, and Mizanur Rahman, “Pregnancy Termination in Matlab, Bangladesh: Trends and
Correlates of Use of Safer and Less-Safe Methods,” International Perspectives on Sexual and
Reproductive Health, Vol. 40, No. 43, September 2014, pp. 119-126; available online at
https://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/journals/4011914.pdf.
Rahman, Mizanur, Julie DaVanzo, and Abdur Razzaque, “Pregnancy Termination in Matlab,
Bangladesh: Maternal Mortality Associated with Menstrual Regulation and Abortion,” International
Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, Vol. 40, No. 43, September 2014, pp. 108-118;
available online at https://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/journals/4010814.pdf.
DaVanzo, Julie, Sebastian Linnemayr, Peter Glick, and Eric Apaydin, Evaluation of the Population
and Poverty Research Initiative (PopPov), RAND, RR-527-WFHF, January 2014; available online
at http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR527.html. Executive Summary (RR-527/1-WFHF)
available at http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RR527z1.html
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DaVanzo, Julie, Mizanur Rahman, Shahabuddin Ahmed, and Abdur Razzaque, “Influences on
Pregnancy-Termination Decisions in Matlab, Bangladesh,” Demography, Vol. 50, No. 5, October
2013, pp. 1739-1764; available online at
http://www.springerlink.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&id=doi:10.1007/s13524-013-0202-8.
Barrett, Jennifer B., Julie DaVanzo, Christopher G. Ellison, and Clifford Grammich, “Religion and
Attitudes Toward Family Planning Issues Among U.S. Adults,” Review of Religious Research.
2013; available online at
http://www.springerlink.com/openurl.asp?genre=article&id=doi:10.1007/s13644-013-0136-z.
Razzaque, Abdur, Akhtar Hossain, Julie DaVanzo, Mohammad Enamul Hoque, Nurul Alam, Abbas
Bhuiya, and Peter Kim Streatfield, “Effect of Maternal Mortality on Survival of Under-five
Children: Evidence from Matlab, Bangladesh,” Asian Population Studies, 2013; available online at
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17441730.2013.851342.
DaVanzo, Julie, Lauren Hale, and Mizanur Rahman, “How long after a miscarriage should women
wait before becoming pregnant again? Multivariate analysis of cohort data from Matlab,
Bangladesh,” BMJ Open, Vol. 2, Issue 4, published 20 August 2012 (BMJ Open 2012;2:e001591
doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2012-001591); available online at
http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/2/4/e001591.full.
Libicki, Martin C., and Julie DaVanzo, “Dusk, Dawn, and High Noon: Demographic Trends Forecast
Next Phases for China, India, and the United States,” RAND Review, January 2012.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Bajram Maxhuni, Demographic, Social and Reproductive Health Survey in
Kosovo, November 2009, Statistics Office of Kosovo, 2011.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Harun Dogo, “China and India: The Asian Giants Are Heading Down Different
Demographic Paths,” RAND, RB-9598, 2011.
Wolf, Charles, Siddhartha Dalal, Julie DaVanzo, Eric Larson, Alisher Akhmedjonov, Harun Dogo,
Melinda Huang, and Silvia Montoya, China-India, 2025: A Comparative Assessment, RAND,
MG-1009-OSD/NA, 2011.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Harun Dogo, with Clifford Grammich, “Demographic Dividend or Demographic
Drag? Population Trends in India and China,” Chapter 2 in C. Wolf et al., China-India, 2025:
A Comparative Assessment, RAND, MG-1009-OSD/ONA, 2011.
DaVanzo, Julie, Harun Dogo, and Clifford Grammich, “Demographic Trends, Policy Influences, and
Economic Effects in China and India Through 2025,” RAND Working Paper, WR-849, April 2011;
available online at
http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/working_papers/2011/RAND_WR849.pdf
Rahman, Mizanur, Julie DaVanzo, and Abdur Razzaque, “The Role of Pregnancy Outcomes in the
Maternal Mortality Rates of Two Areas in Matlab, Bangladesh,” International Perspectives on
Sexual and Reproductive Health, Vol. 36, No. 4, December 2010, pp. 170-177; available as a
RAND reprint at http://www.rand.org/pubs/external_publications/EP201000144.html
Rahman, Mizanur, Julie DaVanzo, Abdur Razzaque, Kapil Ahmed, and Lauren Hale, “Demographic,
Programmatic, and Socioeconomic Correlates of Maternal Mortality in Matlab, Bangladesh,”
Pathfinder International Research and Evaluation Working Paper, July 2009; available online at
http://www.pathfind.org/site/DocServer/ME_Working_Paper_Correlates_of_Maternal_Mortality__for_.pdf?docID=15641
Hale, Lauren, Julie DaVanzo, Abdur Razzaque, and Mizanur Rahman, “What Explains the Decline in
Infant and Child Mortality Rates in Matlab, Bangladesh?,” Journal of Population Research, Vol.
26, No. 1, March 2009, pp. 3-20; available online at
http://www.springerlink.com/content/65wn394g7410q710/fulltext.pdf.
Gonzalez, Gabriella, Vi-Nhuan Le, Markus Broer, Louis T. Mariano, J. Enrique Froemel, Charles A.
Goldman, and Julie DaVanzo, Lessons from the Field: Developing and Implementing the Qatar
Student Assessment System, 2002-2006, RAND, TR-620, 2009.
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Gonzalez, Gabriella, Vi-Nhuan Le, Markus Broer, Louis T. Mariano, J. Enrique Froemel, Charles A.
Goldman, and Julie DaVanzo, “Lessons from Developing and Implementing the Qatar Student
Assessment System,” RAND, RB-9421, 2009 (available in English and Arabic).
Moore, Nancy Y., Clifford A. Grammich, Julie DaVanzo, Bruce Held, John Coombs, and Judith D.
Mele, “Enhancing Small-Business Opportunities in the DoD,” RAND, TR-601-OSD, 2008.
DaVanzo, Julie, Lauren Hale, Abdur Razzaque, and Mizanur Rahman, “The effects of pregnancy
spacing on infant and child mortality in Matlab, Bangladesh: How they vary by the type of
pregnancy outcome that began the interval,” Population Studies, Vol. 62, No. 2, 2008, pp.131-154;
available online at
http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all?content=10.1080/00324720802022089.
Moore, Zhuzhi, Pav Govindasamy Julie DaVanzo, Genene Bizuneh, and Albert Themme, Trends in
Youth Reproductive Health in Ethiopia, 2000 and 2005, Calverton, Maryland: Macro International
Inc., March 2008.
DaVanzo, Julie, Lauren Hale, Abdur Razzaque, and Mizanur Rahman, “Effects of Interpregnancy
Interval and Outcome of the Preceding Pregnancy on Pregnancy Outcomes in Matlab, Bangladesh,”
BJOG (British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology): An International Journal of Obstetrics and
Gynaecology, Volume 114, Issue 9, pp. 1079-1087, Sep 2007; available online at
http://www.blackwellsynergy.com/action/showFullText?submitFullText=Full+Text+HTML&doi=10.1111%2Fj.14710528.2007.01338.x.
Hale, Lauren, Julie DaVanzo, Abdur Razzaque, and Mizanur Rahman, “Why Are Infant and Child
Mortality Rates Lower in the MCH-FP Area of Matlab, Bangladesh? Are the Differences Due to
Differences in Reproductive Patterns?” Studies in Family Planning, Vol. 37, No. 4, pp. 281-292,
December 2006.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Working as a Research Economist at the RAND Corporation,” Newsletter of the
Committee on the Status of Women in the Economics Profession, Spring/Summer 2006, pp. 4-5.
Kuate-Defo, Barthélemy, and Julie DaVanzo, “Reproducibility and Reliability of Reasons for Early
Termination of Breastfeeding,” Population Studies, Vol. 60, No. 1, March 2006.
Grant, Jonathan, Stijn Hoorens, Suja Sivadasan, Mirjam Van Het Loo, Julie DaVanzo, Lauren Hale,
and William Butz, “Should Europe try to increase its fertility rate ... or just manage the
consequences?” International Journal of Andrology, February 2006.
Nichiporuk, Brian, Angel Rabasa, Clifford Grammich, and Julie DaVanzo, “Demographics and
Security in Maritime Southeast Asia,” Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, December
2005.
Nichiporuk, Brian, Christine Fair, Clifford Grammich, and Julie DaVanzo, “Demographics and
Security: The Contrasting Cases of Pakistan and Bangladesh,” Journal of South Asian and Middle
Eastern Studies, Summer 2005.
Razzaque, A., J. DaVanzo, M. Rahman, K. Gausia, L. Hale, M. A. Khan, and A.H.M.G. Mustafa,
“Pregnancy spacing and maternal morbidity in Matlab, Bangladesh,” International Journal of
Gynecology and Obstetrics, Vol. 89, April 2005, pp. 541-549.
Goldman, Charles A., Gail Zellman, Gery W. Ryan, Julie DaVanzo, Nate Orr, Michelle Cho,
Education for a New Era: 2005 RAND Report to the Supreme Education Council, RAND, PM1973-EDU, 2005.
Gonzalez, Gabriella, Vi-Nhuan Le, Louis T. Mariano, Julie DaVanzo, Charles A. Goldman, Derek
Davison, Eric Eide, Laura S. Hamilton, Deanna Weber Prine, Understanding the Qatar Student
Assessment System: A Report on Its Components, Alignment with the Qatar Standards, and MakeUp Policies., RAND, PM-1882-EDU, 2005.
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Christina, Rachel, Julie DaVanzo, Charles A. Goldman, Rita T. Karam, Jesse Reyes, Melissa Rowe,
Maria Teresa V. Taningco, Reporting on Schools in Qatar. Vol. 1, Main Findings and
Recommendations, RAND, PM-1841/1-1-EDU, 2005.
Christina, Rachel, Julie DaVanzo, Charles A. Goldman, Rita T. Karam, Jesse Reyes, Melissa Rowe,
Maria Teresa V. Taningco, Donnie Barnes, Leon Cremonini, Derek Davison, Eric Eide, Deanna
Weber Prine, Aysha Mohammed Al-Hashimi, Yousuf Al-Mulla, Reporting on Schools in Qatar.
Vol. 2, Background Papers, RAND, PM-1841/2-1, 2005.
Engberg, John, Chris Fitzmartin, Julius Gatune, Rita Karam, Julie DaVanzo, Charles A. Goldman,
Eric Eide, Deanna Weber-Prine, Qatar National Education Data System: From Concept to Reality,
RAND, PM-1881-EDU, 2005.
DaVanzo, Julie, Clifford Grammich, Brian Nichiporuk, and C. Christine Fair, “Disarming
Development,” Peace and Conflict Studies, Vol. 7, No. 10, October 2004, pp. 14-15; also available
on the web at
http://www.ipcs.org/South_Asia_articles2.jsp?action=showView&kValue=1501&country=1013&st
atus=article&mod=b; also available as RAND Reprint LRP-200410-15.
Grammich, Clifford, Julie DaVanzo, and Kate Stewart, “Changes in American Opinion on Family
Planning,” Studies in Family Planning, September 2004; also available as RAND Reprint RP-1148.
Grant, Jonathan, Stijn Hoorens, Suja Sividasan, Mirjam van het Loo, Julie DaVanzo, Lauren Hale,
Shawna Gibson, and William Butz, Low Fertility and Population Ageing: Causes, Consequences
and Policy Options, RAND report MG 206-EC, 2004.
DaVanzo, Julie, Abdur Razzaque, Mizanur Rahman, Lauren Hale, Kapil Ahmed, Mehrab Ali Khan,
Golam Mustafa, and Kaniz Gausia, “The Effects of Birth Spacing on Infant and Child Mortality,
Pregnancy Outcomes, and Maternal Morbidity and Mortality in Matlab, Bangladesh,” Report to the
Catalyst Consortium; RAND Working Paper WR-198, 2004; available online at
http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/working_papers/2004/RAND_WR198.pdf
Amin, Shahina, and Julie DaVanzo, “The Impact of Wives' Earnings on the Earnings Inequality
Among Married-Couple Households in Malaysia,” Journal of Asian Economics, Vol. 15, No. 1,
January-February 2004; also available as RAND Reprint RP-1111.
DaVanzo, Julie, Christine Peterson and Nathan Jones, “How Well Do Desired Fertility Measures for
Wives and Husbands Predict Subsequent Fertility? Evidence from Malaysia,” Asia-Pacific
Population Journal, December 2003.
DaVanzo, Julie, Olga Oliker, and Clifford Grammich, “Too Few Good Men: The Domestic and
International Implications of Russian Demographic Trends,” Georgetown Journal of International
Affairs, Summer/Fall 2003; also available as RAND Reprint RP-1078.
DaVanzo, Julie, Olga Oliker, and Clifford Grammich, “A Shrinking Russia,” The Atlantic Monthly,
July-August 2003.
Eloundou-Enyegue, Parfait, and Julie DaVanzo, “Economic downturns and schooling inequality,
Cameroon, 1987-95,” Population Studies, Vol. 57, No. 2, July 2003; also available as RAND
Reprint RP-1102.
Panel to Evaluate the USDA's Methodology for Estimating Eligibility and Participation for the WIC
Program (Julie DaVanzo was member of the panel), Michele Ver Ploeg and David M. Betson,
Editors, Estimating Eligibility and Participation for the WIC Program, Final Report, National
Research Council, National Academy Press, 2003.
Rahman, Mizanur, Julie DaVanzo, and Abdur Razzaque, “When Will Bangladesh Reach
Replacement-Level Fertility? The Role of Education and Family Planning Services,” in Completing
the Fertility Transition, United Nations Population Division, 2002; available on the web at
http://www.un.org/esa/population/publications/completingfertility/2RevisedRAHMANpaper.PDF.
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Grammich, Clifford, and Julie DaVanzo, "Tackling Russia's demographic meltdown," The Russia
Journal, June 7, 2002.
Rahman, Mizanur, Julie DaVanzo, and Abdur Razzaque, “Do Better Family Planning Services Reduce
Abortion in Bangladesh?” The Lancet, Vol. 358, No. 9287, September 2001; also available as
RAND Reprint RP-993.
DaVanzo, Julie, Estimating Eligibility and Participation for the WIC Program, Phase I Report,
National Research Council, National Academy Press, 2001 (co-authored with other members of the
Panel to Evaluate the USDA’s Methodology for Estimating Eligibility and Participation for the WIC
Program).
DaVanzo, Julie, and Joanne Leslie, “Using Quantitative and Qualitative Research Methodologies for
Studying Infant Feeding Practices,” Chapter 2 in Barthélémy Kuate-Defo (ed.), Nutrition and Child
Health in Cameroon, Price-Patterson Ltd., 2001; also available as RAND Reprint RP-995. (Julie
DaVanzo is also co-author, with Barthélémy Kuate-Defo, Joanne Leslie, and Cameroonian coauthors, of Chapters 13, 14, and 15 of this book.)
DaVanzo, Julie, and Clifford Grammich, Dire Demographics: Population Trends in the Russian
Federation, RAND Report MR-1273, 2001.
Beckett, Megan, Julie DaVanzo, Narayan Sastry, Constantijn Panis, and Christine Peterson, “The
Quality of Retrospective Data: An Examination of Long-Term Recall in a Developing Country,”
Journal of Human Resources, Vol. 36, Number 3, Summer 2001, pp. 593-625.
Khalifa, Mona, Julie DaVanzo, and David Adamson, Population Growth in Egypt: A Continuing
Policy Challenge, RAND Issue Paper IP-183, 2000.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Clifford Grammich, “Barren Ground: Eastern Europe's transition from
communism isn't the only factor affecting the region's demographics,” Transitions Online, June 12,
2000
Ver Ploeg, Michele, Joseph Altonji, Norman Bradburn, Julie DaVanzo, William Nordhaus, and
Francisco Samaniego, Time Use Measurement and Research: A Workshop Summary, National
Academy Press, 2000.
Adamson, David, Nancy Belden, Julie DaVanzo, and Sally Patterson. How Americans View World
Population Issues: A Survey of Public Opinion, RAND Report MR-1114-DLPF/WFHF/RF, 2000.
Ngin, ChorSwang, and Julie DaVanzo, “Parent-Child Coresidence and Quasi-Coresidence in
Peninsular Malaysia: Complementary Insights from Quantitative and Qualitative Research,”
Southeast Asian Journal of Social Science, Vol. 27, No. 2, 1999, pp.43-64; also available as RAND
RP-843, Reprint Series 99-09.
DaVanzo, Julie, Comment on chapter on Population Change in East Asia, by Andrew Mason, in
Population Economics, Demographic Transition, and Development: Research and Policy
Implications, Andrew Mason, Thomas Merrick, and R. Paul Shaw, eds., World Bank Working
Paper, 1999.
DaVanzo, Julie, and David Adamson, Family Planning in Developing Countries: An Unfinished
Success Story, RAND Issue Paper, IP-176, 1998 (also available in French, Spanish, Italian,
Portuguese and Arabic).
Menjivar, Cecilia, Julie DaVanzo, Lisa Greenwell, and R. Burciaga Valdez, “Remittance Behavior
among Salvadoran and Filipino Immigrants in Los Angeles,” International Migration Review, 1998.
Johnson, Richard W., and Julie DaVanzo, “Economic and Cultural Influences on the Decision to
Leave Home in Peninsular Malaysia,” Demography, February 1998.
Rahman, Mizanur, and Julie DaVanzo, “Impact of the Grameen Bank on Women’s Status and Fertility
in Bangladesh,” paper presented at the Rockefeller Foundation and the Population Council, New
York, December 1997.
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DaVanzo, Julie, and David Adamson, Russia’s Demographic Crisis: How Real is It?, RAND Issue
Paper, IP-162, July 1997.
DaVanzo, Julie, Elizabeth Lule, and Jay Satia, Review of the Community Health and Family Planning
Project of the Navrongo Health Research Centre: Program Review for the Rockefeller Foundation,
May 1997.
Greenwell, Lisa, Julie DaVanzo, and R. Burciaga Valdez, “Social Ties, Wages, and Gender in a Study
of Salvadoran and Filipino Immigrants in Los Angeles,” Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 7, No. 2,
June 1997.
Kuate-Defo, Barthelemy, Julie DaVanzo, Joanne Leslie, and Elenore Seumo-Fosso, “Using
Quantitative and Qualitative Data to Understand Infant Feeding Practices,” paper presented at the
annual meeting of Population Association of America in Washington, DC, 1997.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Review of ‘Malaysia’s Demographic Transition: Rapid Development, Culture, and
Politics’ (by Richard Leete),” Population and Development Review, Vol. 22, No. 4, December
1996, pp. 795-796.
DaVanzo, Julie, Russia’s Demographic “Crisis,” RAND Conference Proceedings, CF-124-CRES,
1996 (editor of volume and author of introductory chapter).
Johnson, Richard W., and Julie DaVanzo, “Mother-Child Coresidence and Quasi-Coresidence in
Peninsular Malaysia,” Journal of Population, Vol. 2, No. 1, June 1996, pp. 21-42.
Chan, Angelique, and Julie DaVanzo, “Ethnic Differences in Parents’ Coresidence with Adult
Children in Peninsular Malaysia,” Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology, Vol. 11, No. 1, 1996,
pp. 29-59; also available as Labor and Population Reprint Series 96-22, RAND RP-602.
Kuate-Defo, Barthélémy, and Julie DaVanzo, “Data on Reasons for No or Short Breastfeeding: Are
They Reliable and Do They Help Us Understand Infant Feeding Behavior?,” Labor and Population
Program Working Paper 96-03, DRU-1305-NICHD, RAND, 1996.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Barbara Seligman, Evaluation of the USAID Office of Population’s Cooperative
Agreement with the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Population, POPTECH Report,
No. 95-041-022, 1995.
DaVanzo, Julie, “The Potential Role of Household Surveys for Providing Population and Health
Information for Monitoring, Evaluation, and Planning Purposes,” paper presented at the Workshop
on Data Collection Priorities for Population and Health Information in Developing Countries,
organized by the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Population and held at the Academy,
September 1995; available as P-7969, RAND, 1996.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Potential Health Impacts of Family Planning,” Chap. 6 in Evaluation of the Impact
of Health Interventions, edited by Hoda Rashad, Ronald Gray, and Ties Boerma, Belgium:
International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, 1995; also available as Labor and
Population Program Reprint 95-11, RP-441, RAND, 1995. (Published by Family Health
International (1995) in a collection of articles to be shared with individuals and groups interested in
the impact of family planning on women’s lives.)
DaVanzo, Julie, Jeffrey Sine, Christine Peterson, and John Haaga, “Reversal of the Decline in
Breastfeeding in Peninsular Malaysia? Ethnic and Educational Differentials and Data Quality
Issues,” Social Biology, Vol. 41, Issue 1-2, 1994; also available as Labor and Population Program
Reprint 95-07, RP-359, RAND, 1995.
DaVanzo, Julie, Jennifer Hawes-Dawson, R. Burciaga Valdez, Georges Vernez, with Christina
Andrews, Barbara Levitan, Joyce E. Peterson, and Robert Schoeni, Surveying Immigrant
Communities: Policy Imperatives and Technical Challenges, MR-247-FF, RAND, 1994.
Haaga, John, Julie DaVanzo, Christine Peterson, and Tey Nai Peng, “Twelve-Year Follow-Up of
Respondents in a Sample Survey in Peninsular Malaysia,” Asia-Pacific Population Journal, Vol. 9,
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No. 2, June 1994, pp. 61-72; also available as Labor and Population Program Reprint 94-19, RP358, RAND, 1995.
DaVanzo, Julie; Jacob Klerman, and Christine Peterson, “The Roles of Public Policies and
Socioeconomic Change in Explaining Fertility Trends in Peninsular Malaysia,” paper presented at
the 1994 meeting of the Population Association of America in Miami, FL.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Angelique Chan, “Living Arrangements of Older Malaysians—Who Coresides
with Their Adult Children?” Demography, Vol. 31, No. 1, February 1994, pp. 95-113; also
available as Labor and Population Reprint 94-04, RP-284, RAND, 1994.
DaVanzo, Julie, “The Last Word,” pp. 37-38 in Population: Growing as a Field. Papers and
Commentary from a Symposium Celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the Carolina Population
Center, May 5-7, 1991, Chapel Hill, N.C.: Carolina Population Center, published in 1994.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Omar Rahman, “American Families: Trends and Correlates,” Population Index,
Vol. 59, No. 3, Fall 1993, pp. 350-386; also available as Labor and Population Program Reprint 9403, RP-283, RAND, 1994.
DaVanzo, Julie, Omar Rahman and Kul T. Wadhwa, “American Families: Policy Issues,” Population
Index, Vol. 59, No. 4, Winter 1993, pp. 547-566, also available as Labor and Population Program
Reprint 94-06, RP-300, RAND, 1994.
DaVanzo, Julie, Omar Rahman, Christina A. Andrews, and Kul T. Wadhwa, American Families:
Trends and Policy Issues, P-7854, RAND, December 1993.
Rahman, Mizanur, and Julie DaVanzo, “Assessing the Impact of the Grameen Bank on Women’s
Status and Fertility in Bangladesh,” Labor and Population Program Working Paper 93-28, DRU485-RF, RAND, 1993.
Rahman, Mizanur, and Julie DaVanzo, “Gender Preference and Birthspacing in Matlab, Bangladesh,”
Demography, Vol. 30, No. 3, August 1993, pp. 315-332; also available as Reprint RP-233, RAND,
1994.
Haaga, John, Julie DaVanzo, Christine Peterson, and Tey Nai Peng, “Twelve-Year Follow-Up of
Respondents and Their Adult Children in a Panel Survey in Peninsular Malaysia,” Labor and
Population Program Working Paper 93-19, DRU-380-NICHD, RAND, 1993.
Sine, Jeffrey, Tey Nai Peng, and Julie DaVanzo, Proceedings of the Seminar on the Second
Malaysian Family Life Survey, Kuala Lumpur, October 1991, CF-109-NICHD/NIA/WFHF,
RAND, 1993; also published by The National Population and Family Development Board, Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia.
DaVanzo, Julie, “The Second Malaysian Family Life Survey: Overview,” “Breastfeeding,” and
“Living Arrangements,” chapters in J. Sine, Tey N.P., and J. DaVanzo (eds.), Proceedings of the
Seminar on the Second Malaysian Family Life Survey, Kuala Lumpur, October 1991, CF-109NICHD/NIA/WFHF, RAND, 1993.
Haaga, John, Julie DaVanzo, Christine Peterson, Tey Nai Peng, and Tan Boon Ann, The Second
Malaysian Family Life Survey: Overview and Technical Report, MR-106-NICHD/NIA, RAND,
1993.
DaVanzo, Julie, John Haaga, Tey Nai Peng, Ellen Starbird, and Christine Peterson, The Second
Malaysian Family Life Survey: Survey Instruments, MR-107-NICHD/NIA, RAND, 1993.
Valdez, R. Burciaga, Julie DaVanzo, Georges Vernez, and Mitchell Wade, Immigration: Getting the
Facts, Issue Paper, Program for Research on Immigration Policy, IP-123, RAND, 1993.
Haaga, John, Christine Peterson, Julie DaVanzo, and Sharon Mengchee Lee, “Health Status and
Family Support of Older Malaysians,” Labor and Population Program Working Paper 93-17, DRU378-NIA, RAND, 1993.
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DaVanzo, Julie, “Families, Children, Poverty, and Policy,” in J. Steinberg, M. Vaiana, and D. Lyon
(eds.), in Urban America: Policy Choices for Los Angeles and the Nation, RAND, 1992; also
available as Reprint RP-253, RAND, 1994.
Peterson, Christine, and Julie DaVanzo, “Why are Teenagers in the United States Less Likely to
Breastfeed Than Older Women?” Demography, Vol. 29, No. 3, pp. 431-450, August 1992; also
available as RP-184, RAND, 1996.
Govindasamy, Pavalavalli, and Julie DaVanzo, “Ethnicity and Fertility Differentials in Peninsular
Malaysia: Do Policies Matter?” Population and Development Review, Vol. 18, No. 2, June 1992,
pp. 243-267; also available as Reprint RP-183, RAND, 1993.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Ellen Starbird, “Correlates of Short Interbirth Intervals in Peninsular Malaysia:
Their Pathways of Influence through Breastfeeding and Contraceptive Use,” Studies in Family
Planning, Planning, Vol. 22, No. 4, pp. 241-254, July-August 1991; also available as Reprint RP141, RAND, 1992.
DaVanzo, Julie, Allan Parnell, and William Foege, “Health Consequences of Contraceptive Use and
Reproductive Patterns: Summary of a Report from the U.S. National Academy of Sciences,”
Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol. 265, No. 20, May 22-29, 1991, pp. 2692-2696.
DaVanzo, Julie, and John G. Haaga, Women in Development: Issues for the Latin American and
Caribbean Region, Latin America and the Caribbean Technical Department, Regional Studies
Program Report No. 2, World Bank, April 1991.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Easing the Fear of Giving Birth,” Op-Ed article published in 24 U.S. newspapers in
July-August 1990; included in the book, Headline News, Science Views, David Jarmul, ed., National
Academy Press, 1991.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Paul Gertler, “Household Production of Health: A Microeconomic Perspective
on Health Transitions,” chapter in The Health Transition: Methods and Measures (J. Cleland and
A.G. Hill, eds.), Australian National University Printing Service, 1991; also available as N-3014RC, RAND, 1990.
DaVanzo, Julie, Ellen Starbird, and Arleen Leibowitz, “Do Women’s Breastfeeding Experiences with
Their First Borns Affect Whether They Breastfeed Their Subsequent Children?” Social Biology,
Vol. 37, No. 3–4, Fall-Winter 1990, pp. 223–232.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Frances Kobrin Goldscheider, “Coming Home Again: Returns to the Nest in
Young Adulthood,” Population Studies, Vol. 44, July 1990, pp. 241-255.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Health Consequences of Contraceptive Use and Controlled Fertility,” International
Population Conference, New Delhi, 1989, International Union for Scientific Study of Population,
Liege, 1989.
DaVanzo, Julie, Contraception and Reproduction: Health Consequences for Women and Children in
the Developing World, National Academy Press, 1989 (co-authored with other members of the
Working Group on the Health Consequences of Contraceptive Use and Controlled Fertility).
Othman, Ramli, Julie DaVanzo, Tan Boon Ann, and Jane Peterson, “Determinants of Contraceptive
Method Choice in Peninsular Malaysia, 1961–75,” in Choosing a Contraceptive: Method Choice in
Asia and the United States (R. Bulatao, J. Palmore, and S. Ward, eds.), Westview Press, 1989.
Reboussin, David, Julie DaVanzo, Ellen H. Starbird, Tan Boon Ann, and S. Hadi Abdullah,
“Contraceptive Method Switching Over Women’s Reproductive Careers: Evidence from Malaysian
Life History Data, 1940s-1970s,” Journal of Biosocial Science, 1989.
Goldscheider, Frances K., and Julie DaVanzo, “Pathways to Independent Living in Early Adulthood:
Marriage, Semiautonomy, and Premarital Residential Independence,” Demography, November
1989.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Infant Mortality and Socioeconomic Development: Evidence from Malaysian
Household Data,” Demography, Vol. 25, No. 4, November 1988.
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DaVanzo, Julie, David Reboussin, Ellen Starbird, Tan Boon Ann, and S. Hadi Abdulllah,
“Contraceptive Method Switching over Women’s Reproductive Careers: Ethnic Differences in
Peninsular Malaysia, 1940s-1970s,” Malaysian Journal of Reproductive Health, Vol. 6, No. 1, June
1988.
DaVanzo, Julie, “What Accounts for the Increase in Contraceptive Use in Peninsular Malaysia, 1956–
75? Development vs. Family Planning Program Effort,” paper presented at the 1988 meeting of the
Population Association of America.
Pebley, Anne R., and Julie DaVanzo, “Maternal Depletion and Child Survival in Guatemala and
Malaysia,” Labor and Population Program Working Paper 93-18, DRU-379-NICHD/RF, RAND,
1993.
Habicht, Jean-Pierre, Julie DaVanzo, and William P. Butz, “Mother’s Milk and Sewage: Their
Interactive Effects on Infant Mortality,” Pediatrics, Vol. 81, No. 3, March 1988.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Tan Boon Ann, David Reboussin, Ellen Starbird, Ramli Othman and S. Hadi
Abdullah, “Contraceptive Choice and Method Switching in Malaysia,” Fertility Determinants
Research Note, No. 20, The Population Council, December 1987.
Reboussin, David, Julie DaVanzo, Ellen Starbird, Tan Boon Ann, and S. Hadi Abdullah,
Contraceptive Method Switching Over Women’s Reproductive Careers: Evidence from Malaysia,
the RAND Corporation, R-3547-PC/RC, October 1987.
DaVanzo, Julie, “The World Health Survey: Some Considerations from an Economic Demographer’s
Perspective,” background paper for Workshop on Country Health Studies, World Bank, June 1–3,
1987.
Goldscheider, Frances K., and Julie DaVanzo, “Semiautonomy and Leaving Home in Early
Adulthood,” Social Forces, Vol. 65, No. 1, September 1986, pp. 187–201.
Morrison, P. A., and Julie DaVanzo, “The Prism of Migration: Dissimilarities Between Return and
Onward Moves,” Social Science Quarterly, September 1986.
Peterson, C., Khairuddin Yusof, Julie DaVanzo, and Jean-Pierre Habicht, Why Were Infant and Child
Mortality Rates Higher in the Poorest States of Peninsular Malaysia, 1941–75?, the RAND
Corporation, N-2329-RF/FF/WFHF, August 1986.
DaVanzo, Julie, Tan Boon Ann, and Ramli Othman, Determinants of Contraceptive Method Choice
in Peninsular Malaysia, 1961–75, the RAND Corporation, N-2453-PC, July 1986.
Kusnic, M. W., and Julie DaVanzo, “Accounting for Nonmarket Activities in the Distribution of
Income: An Empirical Investigation,” Journal of Development Economics, Vol. 21, No. 2, May
1986, pp. 211–227.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Jean-Pierre Habicht, “Infant Mortality Decline in Malaysia, 1946–75: The Roles
of Changes in Variables and Changes in the Structure of Relationships,” Demography, Vol. 23, No.
2, May 1986.
Habicht, Jean-Pierre, Julie DaVanzo, and William P. Butz, “Does Breastfeeding Really Save Lives, or
are Apparent Benefits Due to Biases?,” American Journal of Epidemiology, Vol. 123, No. 2,
February 1986.
Goldscheider, Frances K., and Julie DaVanzo, “Living Arrangements and the Transition to
Adulthood,” Demography, Vol. 22, No. 4, November 1985.
Habicht, Jean-Pierre, Julie DaVanzo, William P. Butz, and Linda D. Meyers, “The Contraceptive Role
of Breastfeeding,” Population Studies, Vol. 39, No. 2, pp. 213-232, July 1985 (reprinted in
Readings in Population Research Methodology, edited by Donald Bogue, Eduardo Arriaga, and
Douglas Anderson, 1993).
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DaVanzo, Julie, “Infant Mortality and Economic Development: The Case of Malaysia,” International
Population Conference, Florence, 1985, International Union for the Scientific Study of Population,
Liege, 1985.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Measuring Community Variables for Household Health and Demographic Surveys
in Developing Countries,” (paper prepared for presentation at the XX General Conference of the
IUSSP), The RAND Corporation, P-7099, May 1985.
DaVanzo, Julie, “A Household Survey of Child Mortality Determinants in Malaysia,” Population and
Development Review, supplement to Vol. 10, Summer 1984.
DaVanzo, Julie, and M. W. Kusnic, “Regional Income Differences and the Definition of Income: The
Case of Malaysia,” International Regional Science Review, Vol. 9, No. 1, 1984.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Jean-Pierre Habicht, What Accounts for the Decline in Infant Mortality in
Peninsular Malaysia, 1946–1975?, the RAND Corporation, N-2166-WB/RF/FF, June 1984; also
background paper for the 1984 World Development Report, World Bank, issued as chapter in
DaVanzo et al., Quantitative Studies of Mortality Decline in the Developing World; World Bank
Staff Working Papers, No. 683, Population and Development Series, No. 8, World Bank, 1985.
DaVanzo, Julie, Jean-Pierre Habicht, and William P. Butz, “Assessing Socioeconomic Correlates of
Birthweight in Peninsular Malaysia: Ethnic Differences and Changes Over Time,” Social Science
and Medicine, Vol. 18, No. 5, 1984.
Butz, William P., Jean-Pierre Habicht, and Julie DaVanzo, “Environmental Factors in the Relationship
Between Breastfeeding and Infant Mortality: The Role of Sanitation and Water in Malaysia,”
American Journal of Epidemiology, Vol. 119, No. 4, 1984.
Butz, William P., Jean-Pierre Habicht, and Julie DaVanzo, “Improving Infants’ Nutrition, Health, and
Survival: Policy and Program Implications from the Malaysian Family Life Survey,” Malaysian
Journal of Reproductive Health, Vol. 1, No. 2, December 1983; also available as the RAND
Corporation, R-2924-AID, June 1981.
Tan Boon Ann, Ramli Othman, William P. Butz, and Julie DaVanzo, “Age at Menarche in Peninsular
Malaysia: Time Trends, Ethnic Differentials, and Associations with Ages at Marriage and at First
Birth,” Malaysian Journal of Reproductive Health, Vol. 1, No. 2, December 1983; also available as
the RAND Corporation, P-7098.
DaVanzo, Julie, William P. Butz, and Jean-Pierre Habicht, “How Biological and Behavioral
Influences on Mortality in Malaysia Vary During the First Year of Life,” Population Studies, Vol.
37, No. 3, November 1983.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Repeat Migration in the United States: Who Moves Back and Who Moves On?”
Review of Economics and Statistics, November 1983.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Michael W. Kusnic, “Ethnic Differences in Income in Peninsular Malaysia: Their
Sensitivity to the Definition and Measurement of Income,” Singapore Economic Review, October
1983; also available as the RAND Corporation, P-7097.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Peter A. Morrison, Migration Sequences: Who Moves Back and Who Moves On?
the RAND Corporation, R-2548-NICHD, November 1982.
DaVanzo, Julie, and John G. Haaga, “Anatomy of a Fertility Decline: Peninsular Malaysia, 1950–
1976,” Population Studies, Vol. 36, No. 3, pp. 373–393, November 1982.
Kusnic, Michael W., and Julie DaVanzo, “Who Are the Poor in Malaysia?: The Sensitivity of Poverty
Profiles to Definition of Income,” Population and Development Review, August 1982.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Donald L.P. Lee, “The Compatibility of Child Care with Labor Force
Participation and Nonmarket Activities: Preliminary Evidence from Malaysian Time Budget Data,”
in Women and Poverty in the Third World, Mayra Buvinic, Margaret A. Lycette, and William P.
McGreevey (eds.) Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982.
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DaVanzo, Julie, Book review of “Migration and Economic Growth in the United States,” Journal of
Economic Literature, June 1982.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Techniques for Analysis of Migration-History Data,” in Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific, National Migration Surveys: X. Guidelines for Analysis,
United Nations, New York 1982; slightly different version available as the RAND Corporation, N1824-AID/NICHD, May 1982.
Butz, W. P., Julie DaVanzo, and Jean-Pierre Habicht, Biological and Behavioral Influences on the
Mortality of Malaysian Infants, the RAND Corporation, N-1638-AID, April 1982.
DaVanzo, Julie, and William P. Butz, Birthspacing, Fertility, and Family Planning: Policy and
Program Implications from the Malaysian Family Life Survey, the RAND Corporation, R-2925AID, November 1981.
DaVanzo, Julie, and John G. Haaga, Anatomy of a Fertility Decline: Ethnic Differences in the
Experience of Malaysian Women, 1950–1976, the RAND Corporation, N-1639-AID, August 1981.
DaVanzo, Julie, and James R. Hosek, Does Migration Increase Wage Rates?--A Sensitivity Analysis
of Alternative Techniques for Measuring the Effects of Migration, the RAND Corporation, N-1554NICHD, July 1981.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Repeat Migration, Information Costs, and Location-Specific Capital,” Population
and Environment: Behavioral and Social Issues, Vol. 4(1), Spring 1981.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Peter A. Morrison, “Return and Other Migration Sequences in the United States,”
Demography, February 1981.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Microeconomic Approaches to Migration Decisionmaking,” in Gordon F. De Jong
and Robert W. Gardener (eds.), Migration Decision Making: Multidisciplinary Approaches to
Microlevel Studies in Developed and Developing Countries, Pergamon Press, New York, 1981.
Kusnic, Michael W., and Julie DaVanzo, Income Inequality and the Definition of Income: The Case
of Malaysia, the RAND Corporation, R-2416-AID, June 1980.
DaVanzo, Julie, and Julian Simon (editors), Research in Population Economics, Vol. II, JAI Press,
Greenwich, Conn., 1980.
DaVanzo, Julie, and S. Goldstein, Migration and Fertility: Some Illustrative Tabulations Based on
the Malaysian Family Life Survey, the RAND Corporation, N-1310-AID, September 1979.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Does Unemployment Affect Migration?--Evidence from Micro Data,” The Review
of Economics and Statistics, November 1978.
DaVanzo, Julie, and William P. Butz, Influences on Fertility and Infant Mortality in Developing
Countries: The Case of Malaysia, the RAND Corporation, N-1166-AID, November 1978.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Who Moves and Why,” Challenge, The Magazine of Economic Affairs,
September/October 1978.
DaVanzo, Julie, “U.S. Internal Migration: Who Moves and Why?,” testimony before the House Select
Committee on Population, June 1978; also available as P-6133, the RAND Corporation, June 1978.
Butz, William P., and Julie DaVanzo, The Malaysian Family Life Survey: Summary Report, the
RAND Corporation, R-2351-AID, March 1978.
Butz, William P., Julie DaVanzo, Dorothy Z. Fernandez, Rob Jones, and Nyle Spoelstra, The
Malaysian Family Life Survey: Questionnaires and Interviewer Instructions, the RAND
Corporation, R-2351/1-AID, March 1978.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Comment on ‘New, Repeat, and Return Migration: A Study of Migrant Types,’”
Southern Economic Journal, January 1978.
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DaVanzo, Julie, “The Desirability of Disaggregation in Migration Modeling,” in Report of the
Conference on Economic and Demographic Methods for Projecting Population, American
Statistical Association, October 1977.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Migration Patterns and Income Change: Implications for the Human Capital
Approach to Migration: Comment,” Southern Economic Journal, October 1977.
DaVanzo, Julie, Why Families Move: A Model of the Geographic Mobility of Married Couples, the
RAND Corporation, R-1972-DOL, September 1976; also available as R&D Monograph No. 48,
U.S. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration, 1977.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Comment on M. J. Greenwood’s ‘Simultaneity Bias in Migration Models: An
Empirical Investigation,’” Demography, Vol. 13, No. 3, August 1976.
DaVanzo, Julie, Dennis N. De Tray, and David H. Greenberg “The Sensitivity of Labor Supply
Estimates to Choice of Assumptions,” Review of Economics and Statistics, Vol. 68, No. 3, August
1976.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Differences Between Return and Nonreturn Migration: An Econometric Analysis,”
International Migration Review, Vol. 10, No. 1, Spring 1976.
Butz, William P., and Julie DaVanzo, Economic and Demographic Family Behavior in Malaysia: A
Conceptual Framework for Analysis, the RAND Corporation, R-1834-AID, October 1975.
DaVanzo, Julie, and David H. Greenberg, “Assessing Regional Effects of Income Maintenance
Programs: A Guide to Policy Analysis,” The Review of Regional Studies, Vol. 4, No. 3, Winter
1974.
DaVanzo, Julie, Dennis N. De Tray, and David H. Greenberg, Estimating Labor Supply Responses: A
Sensitivity Analysis, the RAND Corporation, R-1372-OEO, December 1973.
DaVanzo, Julie, and David H. Greenberg, Suggestions for Assessing Economic and Demographic
Effects of Income Maintenance Programs, the RAND Corporation, R-1211-EDA, June 1973.
DaVanzo, Julie, “Assessing the Potential Impact of an Income Maintenance Program on Migration:
Hypotheses and Suggestions for Research,” the RAND Corporation, P-5006, May 1973.
DaVanzo, Julie, An Analytical Framework for Studying the Potential Effects on an Income
Maintenance Program on U.S. Interregional Migration, the RAND Corporation, R-1081-EDA,
December 1972.
DaVanzo, Julie, The Determinants of Family Formation in Chile, 1960: An Econometric Study of
Female Labor Force Participation, Marriage, and Fertility Decisions, the RAND Corporation, R830-AID, August 1972.
DaVanzo, Julie, A Family Choice Model of U.S. Interregional Migration Based on the Human
Capital Approach, Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles, 1972.
Schultz, T. Paul, and Julie DaVanzo, Analysis of Demographic Change in East Pakistan: A Study in
Retrospective Survey Data, The RAND Corporation, R-564-AID, September 1970.
Schultz, T.Paul, and Julie DaVanzo, Fertility Patterns and Their Determinants in the Arab Middle
East, the RAND Corporation, RM-5978-FF, May 1970; also included as Chap. 9 in Charles A.
Cooper and Sidney S. Alexander (eds.), Economic Development and Population Growth in the
Middle East, American Elsevier, New York, 1972.
In Progress or Under Journal Review
Rahman, Mizanur, Julie DaVanzo, and Abdur Razzaque, “Too Much Maternal Mortality: The Effect
of Reproductive Patterns in Matlab, Bangladesh,” revising and resubmitting in response to journal
reviews.
15
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Pipero, Pellumb, Alban Ylli, Elona Gjebrea, Alma Spaho, and Julie DaVanzo, “Risky health
behaviors among Albanian youths: Smoking, drinking, body mass index (BMI) and their
correlates,” under journal review.
Razzaque, Abdur, Julie DaVanzo, Mizanur Rahman, and Shahabuddin Ahmed, “Knowledge, cost and
decision making process of pregnancy termination in Matlab, Bangladesh,” being prepared for
journal submission.
Hoque, Mohammad Enamul, Abdur Razzaque, Eva Naznin, Shahabuddin Ahmed, Abdullah Al
Mamun, and Julie DaVanzo, “Economic Value of Unpaid Work of Rural Women in Bangladesh:
Evidence from a Time-and-Motion Approach," being prepared for journal submission.
Rev. 9-20-14
16
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