GUNNAR ANDERSSON

PERSONAL INFORMATION NOV 2020

Work address: University, Department of Sociology 106 91 Stockholm, Telephone • email: 0046 8 163261 • 0046 73 768 5724 • [email protected] www.suda.su.se; www.su.se/profiles/gande Nationality: Swedish Born: 1962 in Hallsberg, Sweden

ACADEMIC DEGREES

2009 Professor in Demography at 2005 Associate Professor (Docent) in Demography at Stockholm University 1999 Ph.D. (Fil. Dr.) in Demography at Stockholm University. Thesis title: Trends in Childbearing and Nuptiality in Sweden: A Period Analysis. Supervisor: Jan Hoem 1989 B.Sc. (Fil. Kand.) in Statistics at Lund University

PROFESSIONAL HISTORY

Head of Stockholm University Demography Unit (SUDA) since 2013. Lecturer in Demography at Stockholm University since 2006. Coordinator of Stockholm University SIMSAM Node for Demographic Research, as part of the Swedish Initiative for research on Microdata in the Social and Medical Sciences, and Associate Director of Stockholm University Linnaeus Center on Social Policy and Family Dynamics in Europe, during 2008-2019. Previously Research Scientist during seven years at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, . Also seven years experience of forecasting and demographic analyses for Region Stockholm.

RESEARCH FOCUS

 Fertility and family dynamics in the Nordic countries: - Social policy, welfare states and fertility - Family forerunners and new family trends

 Migrant trajectories  Generations and Gender: - Gender preferences - Ageing and mortality

APPOINTMENTS, CAREER HISTORY AND CONTENTS OF WORK

Aug 2006 – present: Stockholm University Department of Sociology  Head of Stockholm University Demography Unit, SUDA (www.suda.su.se).  Associate Director, Linnaeus Center on Social Policy and family Dynamics in Europe, SPaDE, 2008-2019 (see www.su.se/spade).  Project coordinator, Stockholm University SIMSAM Node for Demographic Research, financed through the Swedish Initiative for research on Microdata in the Social and Medical Sciences, 2008-2019 (see www.suda.su.se/simsam).  Member of the management team of the FP7 project FamiliesAndSocieties, 2013-2017 (www.familiesandsocieties.eu).  PI of the Forte program “Ageing Well - Individuals, Families and Households under Changing Demographic Regimes in Sweden”.  Steering committee member of the Forte program “Migrant Trajectories: Geographical Mobility, Family Careers, Employment, Education, and Social Insurance in Sweden”.  Steering committee member of the RJ program “The Neighborhood Revisited: Spatial Polarization and Social Cohesion in Contemporary Sweden”.  Lecturer in Demography.  Supervisor of Ph.D. and Master’s students.  Coordinator of the Multi-disciplinary Master’s Program in Demography at Stockholm University in 2008.  Teacher of “Population Development and Social Change” in the Multi- disciplinary Master’s Program in Demography since 2006.  Teacher of “Family Dynamics in a Changing Europe” in the Master’s Program in 2006-2008. In 2007, the course was given simultaneously at Stockholm University and University of Wisconsin-Madison, by means of video classes.  Teacher of “Introduction to Event-history Analysis” in the Master’s Program in 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2011.  Teacher of “Basic Concepts in Life-course Research” for Mie University; Hacettepe University; Tallinn University.  Editor of Stockholm Research Reports in Demography.  Organiser of Colloquium Series, 2007-2011.  Organizer of project workshops and workshop on “Economic Uncertainty and Family Dynamics”, Berlin 2009; “Register-based Demographic Research”, Stockholm 2010; “Introduction to Population Issues and Population-related Policies of Sweden” for the Chinese National Population and Family Planning Commission, Stockholm 2010; “New Developments in Register-based Demographic Research”, Stockholm 2015.  Member of organization committee for the European Population Conference in Stockholm, EPC 2012.  Organizer of the 21st Nordic Demographic Symposium in Reykjavik, Iceland, June 2019.  Director of the Swedish Generations and Gender Programme. Swedish member of the GGP Consortium Board.

Oct 1999 – April 2007: Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research – Research Scientist  Senior Research Scientist in the Laboratory of Contemporary European Fertility and Family Dynamics.  Head of a Research Team on Transnational Vital Events, in collaboration with Professor Caroline Bledsoe of Northwestern University, 2004-07.  Convenor of the Laboratory’s working group for analyses on register data.  Member of a working group in 2000-01 to develop questionnaires for the European “Generations and Gender Programme”.  Supervisor/mentor of Ph.D. students.  Teacher in charge of “Introduction to regression analysis for duration data (event-history analysis)” at the International Max Planck Research School for Demography (IMPRSD) in 2002-03, 2003-04, and 2004-05.  Teacher in charge of “Regression analysis for duration data incorporating selectivity/unobserved heterogeneity” at the IMPRSD and Stockholm University in 2005-06. Assistant teacher to Professor Jan M. Hoem at the same course in 2000-01 and 2001-02 at IMPRSD.  Organiser of the Rostock Demographic Colloquium Series for the winter semester 2002-03.  Organiser of the Workshops on “Contemporary Research on European Fertility”, 2004; “Nordic Population Research at Statistics Sweden and MPIDR”, 2004; and the Symposium on “The Demography of Europe”, 2007.

Jan 1994 – Oct 1999: Stockholm University Demography Unit (SUDA) – Ph.D. Candidate Jan 1994 – Jan 1998 on  Ph.D. student at SUDA. half-time, subsequently  Research assistant in projects supported by the Swedish Council for Social on full-time Research, 1994-98, the Research Foundations of Svenska Handelsbanken, 1998, and the Swedish Council for Research in the Humanities and the Social Sciences, 1999.  Lecturer in charge of the population-forecasting courses at SUDA in 1998-99.  Administrator of the graduate-course program in Demography during 1999.

Jan 1994 – Jan 1998: Inregia AB (The Institute for Regional Analysis) – Consultant Half-time employed  Responsible for the annual population forecast for the County Council of Stockholm: for the whole county and sub-areas within the county. Reported in: Prognos 94(95,96,97): Befolkningen i län och kommunerna. Statistik om Stockholms län, 1994(95,96,97), Stockholms läns landsting.  Population forecasts for various municipalities in the Stockholm region: Sundbyberg, Danderyd, Ekerö, Järfälla, Sollentuna.  Long-term population scenarios for the County of Stockholm and the rest of Sweden, disaggregated into smaller geographical areas.  Various demographic studies for Regionplane- och trafikkontoret (RTK), Kommunförbundet, etc.

Nov 1990 – Dec 1993: Regionplane- och trafikkontoret (The Office of Regional Planning and Urban Transportation) – Statistician  Annual population forecasts for the County Council of Stockholm. Reported in: Prognos 91(92,93): Befolkningen i Stockholms län och kommunerna. Statistik om Stockholms län, 1991(92,93), Stockholms läns landsting.  Long-term population scenarios for the County of Stockholm and the surrounding counties, disaggregated into smaller geographical areas.

OTHER POSITIONS AND ACTIVITIES

2001 Honorary Fellow at the Department of Sociology, University of Wisconsin- Madison, 10 weeks.

Member of the reference and editorial group of the fertility commission of the 2001 Swedish Ministry of Health and Social Affairs: Barnafödandet i fokus: Från

befolkningspolitik till ett barnvänligt samhälle, DS 2001:57, Fritzes, Stockholm.

2005 Consultant for the “Study on Population Related Matters – A Study on Policies and Practices in Selected Countries that Encourage Childbirth” for the Government of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

2000 – present Organizer of Nordic network of researchers from Sweden, , Denmark, Iceland, and Finland investigating family-demographic developments on the basis of register data from these countries.

2010–2018 Board member, National SIMSAM Steering Group.

2010– Board member, SINGS, The Swedish Interdisciplinary Graduate School in Register-based Research.

2011–2016 Member of “Evaluation Panel 5” of the Council for Research Infrastructures at the Swedish Research Council.

2016-2018 Member of the Social Sciences and Humanities Granting Committee for independent projects of the Research Council of Norway.

2012– Member of the Council of Advisors to Population Europe.

2018– Member of the Generations and Gender Programme Consortium Board

2013–2015 Member of the user board for Population, Demography and Education at Statistics Sweden.

2019–2021 Member of the user board for Population, Demography and Integration at Statistics Sweden.

2013 Recipient of the Mattei Dogan Foundation Award for Comparative Research in Demography, by the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP). http://www.iussp.org/node/6521

2014 Visiting researcher, Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (WZB), with research project at the Research Data Centre (FDZ) of the German Federal Employment Agency, July.

2016 Visiting professor, Mie University Graduate School of Medicine, November.

2009 and 2018 Visiting Fellow, Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute at the Australian National University, January through March 2009 and January- February 2018.

2019-2022 Instructor, Doctoral program at Hertie School of Governance and Humboldt University: The Dynamics of Demography, Democratic Processes and Public Policy.

MAJOR GRANTS

Register-based Research in Nordic Demography. 24.7 M SEK granted by the Swedish Research Council, Vetenskapsrådet, by means of the Swedish Initiative for research on Microdata in the Social and Medical Sciences (SIMSAM), for the period 2008-2013.

Stockholm University SIMSAM Node for Demographic Research (SUNDEM). 25.0 M SEK granted by the Swedish Research Council, Vetenskapsrådet, by means of the Swedish Initiative for research on Microdata in the Social and Medical Sciences (SIMSAM), for the period 2014-2018.

Co-applicant with Professor Elizabeth Thomson for Linnaeus Center on Social Policy and Family Dynamics in Europe (SPaDE). 70 M SEK granted by the Swedish Research Council, Vetenskapsrådet, for the period 2008-2018.

Co-applicant with Professor Bo Malmberg for The Neighborhood Revisited: Spatial Polarization and Social Cohesion in Contemporary Sweden. 40 M SEK granted by the Riksbankens Jubileumsfond for the period 2019-2024.

Ageing well - individuals, families and households under changing demographic regimes in Sweden. 18 M SEK during 2017-2022. Program grant from the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare, FORTE.

Co-applicant with Professor Bo Malmberg for Migrant Trajectories: Geographical Mobility, Family Careers, Employment, Education, and Social Insurance in Sweden 1990-2016. 18 M SEK during 2017-2022. Program grant from the Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare, FORTE.

Welfare, Labor-market Status and Family Dynamics. 2.5 M SEK during 2009- 2011. Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research.

Swedish families in the past and present: Family structure and kinship over 250 years (for Martin Kolk). 3.03 M SEK during 2014-2016. Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare.

Co-applicant in ERC Advanced Grant by Hill Kulu at St. Andrews University (Migrant Life). 0.8 M SEK assigned to SU during 2019-2022.

A Swedish Generations and Gender Survey 2020. 3.81 M SEK granted by the Riksbankens Jubileumsfond during 2020-2022.

Rising social inequalities and Swedish fertility decline. 4.3 M SEK during 2021- 2023. Swedish Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare.

MEMBERSHIPS

Swedish Demographic Association European Association for Population Studies

Population Association of America

International Union for the Scientific Study of Population

SUPERVISION OF PHD THESES

Sutay Yavuz, 2008. Fertility Decline in Turkey from the 1980s Onwards: Patterns by Main Language Groups.

Karin Tesching, 2012. Education and Fertility: Dynamic Interrelations between

Women’s Educational Level, Educational Field and Fertility in Sweden.

Lesia Nedoluzhko, 2012. Demographic Journeys along the Silk Road: Marriage,

Childbearing, and Migration in Kyrgyzstan.

Sara Thalberg, 2013. Students and Family Formation: Studies on Educational

Enrolment and Childbearing in Sweden.

Maria Brandén, 2014. Gendered Migration Patterns within a Sex Segregated

Labor Market.

Li Ma, 2014. Female Employment and Fertility Change in South Korea.

Martin Kolk, 2014. Multigenerational Processes in Demography.

Kieron Barclay, 2014. The Long-term Impact of Birth Order on Health and

Educational Attainment.

Sofi Ohlsson-Wijk, 2015. Family Formation in Sweden around the Turn of the

New Millenium.

Johan Dahlberg, 2016. Parents, Children and Childbearing.

Margarita Chudnovskaya, 2017. Higher Education and Family Formation: A story

of Swedish educational expansion.

Marie Berlin, 2020. Out-of-Home Care and Educational Outcomes: Prevalence,

patterns and consequences.

Ari Jónsson, 2020. Beyond the Second Demographic Transition? Fertility developments and family dynamics in Iceland.

Supervisor of Master’s Sofi Ohlsson, 2009. Marriage in Fashion? Trend Reversal in Marriage Formation Theses in Sweden. Final version published in Population Studies 65(2): 183-200.

Martin Kolk, 2009. Deliberate Birth Spacing in Pre-transitional Sweden. Final version published in European Journal of Population 27(3): 337-359. Li Ma, 2009. Social Policy and Childbearing Behavior in Japan since the 1960s. Available as Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2009:10. Johan Carlsson, 2010. Social Background and Becoming a Parent in Sweden. Available as Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2011:5. Farhan Ahmad, 2011. Male Immigrants’ Fertility in Spain. Zhang Wenhua, 2011. Son Preference and Second Birth in China. Available as Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2011:19. Md Salim Zahangir, 2011. Patterns in Early and Very Early Family Formation in Bangladesh. Published 2015 in Asian Profile 43(2): 123-140. Dedek Prayudi, 2012. Childbearing Trends in Indonesia since the 1998 Political Reform. Markus Läll, 2014. Fertility Transition in 19th-20th Century Estonia: An Individual Level Perspective. Available as Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2015:24. Ari Jónsson, 2015. Childbearing Trends in Iceland 1982-2013. Final version published 2017 in Demographic Research 37(7): 147-188. Andreas Raneke, 2016. The Impact of Children on Emigration - A Study of EU- 15 Migrants in Sweden. Available as Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2017:9. Oskar Adenfelt, 2017. Home-leaving and Parenthood: Timing of home-leaving and its relation to childbearing in Sweden. Maximilian Deiters, 2017. Distinguishing policy effectiveness by applicability and acceptability: ’s child care infrastructure and transition to first birth. Available as Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2019:22.

SUMMARY OF TEACHING EXPERIENCE: CLASS-ROOM HOURS

Stockholm University Population Development and Social Change Dept of Sociology 15 h annually 2006-2011; 7-10 h annually since 2012 Course in population forecasting in the Demography program 13 lecture hours in 1996, 1998, 1999 + 3 h annually since 2010 Family Dynamics in a Changing Europe: 21 h 2006; 24 h 2007; 16 h 2008 Introduction to Event-history Analysis: 40 h 2007; 40 h 2008; 29 h 2010; 28 h 2011 Regression Analysis for Duration Data w Unobserved Heterogeneity: 36 h 2005 Lecturer in course on demographic methods 4 h in 2002; 7 h 2006; 8 h 2007; 6 h 2008 and 2009

International Max Introduction to Regression Analysis for Duration Data (Event-history Analysis) Planck Research School 38 lecture hours 2002/03; 48 h 2003/04; 48 h 2004/05 in Demography Lecturer in Regression Analysis for Duration Data Incorporating Selectivity/ Unobserved Heterogeneity: 10 hours 2000/01 and 2001/02

Others Lecturer in small-area population forecasting at the Royal Institute for Technology (Stockholm) in 1998: 8 hours Teacher in courses in SINGS, The Swedish Interdisciplinary Graduate School in Register-based Research: 14 h in 2011; 12 h in 2013, 15 h 2014, 2015, 2016 Teacher in Nordic Research School in Register-based Research supported by Nordforsk: one week in 2019, one week in 2020 Teacher in course in demography for Statistics Sweden: 7 h in 2012 Teacher in courses on Basic Concepts in Life Course Research: one week at Hacettepe University, Ankara (2015), one week at Tallinn University (2019), one course period at Mie University (2018)

REVIEWING ETC

Deputy Editor: Demography (2019-2022)

Managing Co-Editor: European Journal of Population (2008-2017)

Associated Editor: Genus (2009—) Editorial Board: Population, Space and Place (2018—) Canadian Studies in Population (2008—)

Project reviews for: European Commission / European Research Council JPI More years better life The Israel Science Foundation The Research Council of Norway The Swedish Research Council The Flemish Research Council Academy of Finland

Svenska litteratursällskapet i Finland

Doctoral Dissertation Johan Fredrik Rye, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 2006 Opponent / Examiner Torkild Hovde Lyngstad, University of , 2007 for: Paulina Galezewska, University of Southampton, 2015 Ben Wilson, London School of Economics, 2015 Elisabeth Kraus, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, 2017 Katharina Wolf, University of Groningen, 2018

Referee for: Acta Sociologica Advances in Life Course Research American Sociological Review Anthropological Notebooks Biodemography and Social Biology Canadian Studies in Population Demographic Research Demography European Journal of Population European Sociological Review Genus International Migration International Migration Review International Sociology Journal of Biosocial Science Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies Journal of Family Issues Journal of Family Studies Journal of International Migration and Integration Journal of Marriage and Family Journal of Population Research Population Population and Environment Population and Development Review Population Research and Policy Review Population Review Population, Space and Place Population Studies Review of Economics of the Household Scandinavian Journal of Economics Scandinavian Journal of History Scandinavian Journal of Public Health Scandinavian Psychologist Social Forces Social Science History Social Science & Medicine Social Science Research Statistical Modelling: An International Journal Studies in Family Planning The History of the Family The Lancet Healthy Longevity Urban Studies Vienna Yearbook of Population Research

PUBLICATIONS

2021 Andersson, Gunnar, 2021. “Family behavior of migrants”. In: Schneider, N., and Kreyenfeld, M., Eds., Sociology of the Family: in press. Research Handbooks in Sociology. Edward Elgar Publishing. 2020 Comolli, Chiara, Gerda Neyer, Gunnar Andersson, Lars Dommermuth, Peter Fallesen, Marika Jalovaara, Ari Jónsson, Martin Kolk and Trude Lappegård, forthcoming. “Beyond the Economic Gaze: Childbearing during and after recessions in the Nordic countries”. European Journal of Population: in press. DOI: 10.1007/s10680-020-09570-0.

Drefahl, Sven, Matthew Wallace, Eleonora Mussino, Siddartha Aradhya, Martin Kolk, Maria Brandén, Bo Malmberg, and Gunnar Andersson, 2020. ”A population-based cohort study of socio-demographic risk factors for COVID-19 deaths in Sweden”. Nature Communications 11, 5097. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-18926-3. Brandén, Maria, Siddartha Aradhya, Martin Kolk, Juho Härkönen, Sven Drefahl, Bo Malmberg, Mikael Rostila, Agneta Cederström, Gunnar Andersson, and Eleonora Mussino, 2020. ”Residential context and COVID-19 mortality among adults aged 70 years and older in Stockholm: a population-based, observational study using individual-level data”. The Lancet Healthy Longevity 1: e80-88. DOI: 10.1016/s2666-7568(20)30016-7. Berlin, Marie, Antti Kääriälä, Mette Lausten, Gunnar Andersson, and Lars Brännström, 2020. ”Long-term NEET among young adults with experience of out-of-home care: A comparative study of three Nordic countries”. International Journal of Social Welfare: online first. DOI: 10.1111/ijsw.12463. Kolk, Martin and Gunnar Andersson, 2020. “Two decades of same-sex marriage in Sweden: A demographic account of developments in marriage, childbearing, and divorce”. Demography 57(1): 147-169. DOI: 10.1007/s13524-019-00847-6.

Ma, Li, Gunnar Andersson, Ann-Zofie Duvander, and Marie Evertsson, 2020. “Fathers’ uptake of parental leave: Forerunners and laggards in Sweden, 1993-2010”. Journal of Social Policy 49(2): 361-381. DOI: 10.1017/S0047279419000230. Ohlsson-Wijk, Sofi, Jani Turunen, and Gunnar Andersson, 2020. “Family forerunners? An overview of family demographic change in Sweden”. In: Farris, N., and Bourque, A., Eds., International Handbook on the Demography of Marriage and the Family: 65-77. International Handbooks of Population 7. Springer Nature Switzerland AG. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-35079-6_5.

Xie, Shao-Hua, Kalle Mälberg, Gunnar Andersson and Jesper Lagergren, 2020. ”Geographical variations in the incidence of oesophageal cancer in Sweden”. Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology 55(3): 258-264. DOI: 10.1080/00365521.2020.1724322. 2019 Erlangsen, Annette, Sven Drefahl, Ann Haas, Charlotte Björkenstam, Merete Nordentoft and Gunnar Andersson, 2019. “Suicide among persons who entered same-sex and opposite-sex marriage in Denmark and Sweden, 1989-2016: a binational, register-based cohort study”. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health: 14 Nov. DOI: 10.1136/jech-2019-213009.

Dahlberg, Johan and Gunnar Andersson, 2019. “Fecundity and human birth seasonality in Sweden:

a register-based study”. Reproductive Health 16:87. DOI: 10.1186/s12978-019-0754-1.

Jalovaara, Marika, Gerda Neyer, Gunnar Andersson, Johan Dahlberg, Lars Dommermuth, Peter Fallesen, and Trude Lappegård, 2019. ”Education, gender, and cohort fertility in the Nordic countries”. European Journal of Population 35(3): 563-586. DOI: 10.1007/s10680-018- 9492-2. 2018 Dahlberg, Johan and Gunnar Andersson, 2018. “Changing seasonal variation in births by sociodemographic factors: A population-based register study”. Human Reproduction Open 2018, 4(15): 1-8. DOI: 10.1093/hropen/hoy015. Jalovaara, Marika and Gunnar Andersson, 2018. ”Disparities in children’s family experiences by mother’s socioeconomic status: The case of Finland”. Population Research and Policy

Review 37(5): 751-768. DOI: 10.1007/s11113-018-9485-1.

Miranda, Vitor, Johan Dahlberg, and Gunnar Andersson, 2018. “Parents’ preferences for sex of children in Sweden: Attitudes and outcomes”. Population Research and Policy Review 37(3): 443-459. DOI: 10.1007/s11113-018-9462-8.

Schéele, Siv and Gunnar Andersson, 2018. “Municipality attraction and commuter mobility in

urban Sweden: An analysis based on longitudinal population data”. Urban Studies 55(9):

1875-1903. DOI: 10.1177/0042098017705829. Uggla, Caroline and Gunnar Andersson, 2018. “Higher divorce risk when mates are plentiful? Evidence from Denmark”. Biology Letters 14: 20180475. DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2018.0475.

2017 Andersson, Gunnar, Elizabeth Thomson, and Aija Duntava, 2017. “Life-table representations of st family dynamics in the 21 century”. Demographic Research 37(35): 1081-1230. DOI: 10.4054/DemRes.2017.37.35. Andersson, Gunnar and Sven Drefahl, 2017. ”Long-distance migration and mortality in Sweden: Testing the salmon bias and healthy migrant hypotheses”. Population, Space and Place 23(4): e2032. DOI: 10.1002/psp.2032.

Andersson, Gunnar, Lotta Persson, and Ognjen Obućina, 2017. “Depressed fertility among descendants of immigrants in Sweden”. Demographic Research 36(39): 1149-1184. DOI: 10.4054/DemRes.2017.36.39. Andersson, Gunnar, 2017. “Migration”. In: Duvander, A.-Z., and Turunen, J., Eds, Demografi: Befolkningsperspektiv på samhället: 93-113. Lund: Studentlitteratur. ISBN: 978-91-44- 11903-8.

Björkenstam Charlotte, Emma Björkenstam, Gunnar Andersson, Susan Cochran, and Kyriaki Kosidou, 2017. ”Anxiety and depression among sexual minority women and men in Sweden: Is the risk equally spread within the sexual minority population?” The Journal of Sexual Medicine 14(3): 396-403. DOI: 10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.01.012. Kulu, Hill, Tina Hannemann, Ariane Pailhé, Karel Neels, Sandra Krapf, Amparo González-Ferrer, and Gunnar Andersson, 2017. “Fertility by birth order among the descendants of immigrants in selected European countries”. Population and Development Review 43(1): 31-60. DOI: 10.1111/padr.12037.

Neyer, Gerda, Jan M. Hoem, and Gunnar Andersson, 2017. “Education and childlessness: The influence of educational field and educational level on childlessness among Swedish and Austrian women”. In: Kreyenfeld, M., and Konietzka, D., Eds, Childlessness in Europe:

Contexts, Causes and Consequences: 183-207. Doordrecht: Springer. ISBN: 978-3-319- 44665-3 (Print) 978-3-319-44667-7 (Online). DOI: 10.10007/978-319-44667-7_9.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2016. “Boys, girls, preferences and the links between past and present”. In: 2016 Matthijs, K., Hin, S., Kok, J., and Matsuo, H., Eds, The Future of Historical Demography.

Upside and Down and Inside Out, pp. 67-70. Leuven / Den Haag: Acco Publishers. ISBN

978-94-6292-722-3.

Björkenstam,Charlotte, Gunnar Andersson, Christina Dalman, Susan Cochran, and Kyriaki Kosidou, 2016. ”Suicide in married couples in Sweden: Is the risk greater in same-sex couples?” European Journal of Epidemiology 31(7): 685-690. DOI: 10.1007/s10654-016- 0154-6.

Björkenstam,Charlotte, Kyriaki Kosidou, Emma Björkenstam, Christina Dalman, Gunnar

Andersson, and Susan Cochran, 2016. ”Self-reported suicide ideation and attempts, and medical care for intentional self-harm in lesbians, gays, and bisexuals in Sweden”. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 70(9): 895-901. DOI: 10.1136/jech-2015-206884. Lagergren, Jesper, Gunnar Andersson, Mats Talbäck, Sven Drefahl, Erik Bihagen, Juho Härkönen, Maria Feychting, and Rickard Ljung, 2016. “Marital status, education and income in relation to risk of esophageal and gastric cancer by histological type and site”. Cancer 122(2): 207- 212. DOI: 10.1002/cncr.29731.

2015 Andersson, Gunnar, Ognjen Obućina, and Kirk Scott, 2015. “Marriage and divorce of immigrants and descendants of immigrants in Sweden”. Demographic Research 33(2): 31-64. DOI: 10.4054/DemRes.2015.33.2. Andersson, Gunnar and Martin Kolk, 2015. “Trends in childbearing, marriage and divorce in Sweden: An update with data up to 2012”. Finnish Yearbook of Population Research 2015: 21-30.

Elvander, Charlotte, Johan Carlsson Dahlberg, Gunnar Andersson, and Sven Cnattingius, 2015. “Mode of delivery and the probability of subsequent childbearing: A population-based register study”. BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology 122(12): 1593-1600. DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.13021. 2014 Andersson, Gunnar, Michaela Kreyenfeld, and Tatjana Mika, 2014. “Welfare state context, female labor-market attachment and childbearing in Germany and Denmark”. Journal of Population Research 31(4): 287-316. DOI: 10.1007/s12546-014-9135-3. Kreyenfeld, Michaela and Gunnar Andersson, 2014. “Socioeconomic differences in the unemployment and fertility nexus: Evidence from Denmark and Germany“. Advances in Life Course Research 21: 59-73. DOI: 10.1016/j.alcr.2014.01.007.

2013 Andersson, Gunnar, and Boris Sobolev, 2013. “Small effects of selective migration and selective survival in retrospective studies of fertility”. European Journal of Population 29(3): 345-354. DOI: 10.1007/s10680-013-9293-6.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2013. ”Barnafödande i kristider”. Jordemodern No. 4/2013: 24-26.

Lappegård, Trude, Ann-Zofie Duvander, and Gunnar Andersson, 2013. “Har foreldrepermisjon betydning for barnefødsler?” In: Brandth, B., and Kvande, E., Eds, Fedrekvoten og den farsvennlige velferdsstaten: 211-221. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. ISBN 978-82-15-02189-8.

Ljung, Rickard, Sven Drefahl, Gunnar Andersson, and Jesper Lagergren, 2013. ”Socio-economic and geographical factors in esophageal and gastric cancer mortality in Sweden”. PLOS ONE 8(4): e62067. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062067. Neyer, Gerda, Gunnar Andersson, Hill Kulu, Laura Bernardi, and Christoph Bühler, Eds, 2013. The Demography of Europe, 226 p. Doordrecht: Springer. ISBN 978-90-481-8977-9 (Print); DOI: 10.1007/978-90-481-8978-6 (Online). Neyer, Gerda, Gunnar Andersson, and Hill Kulu, 2013. “The Demography of Europe: Introduction”. In: Neyer, G., et al., Eds, The Demography of Europe: 1-13. Doordrecht: Springer. DOI: 10.1007/978-90-481-8978-6_1. Neyer, Gerda, Jan Hoem, and Gunnar Andersson, 2013. “Kinderlosigkeit, Bildungsrichtung und Bildungsniveau. Ergebnisse einer Untersuchung schwedischer und österreichischer Frauen der Geburtenjahrgänge 1955-59“. In: Konietzka, D., and Kreyenfeld, M., Eds, Ein Leben ohne Kinder – Kinderlosigkeit in Deutschland, 2nd Edition: 101-135. Wiesbaden: Springer VS. ISBN 978-3-531-18355-8 (Print); DOI: 10.1007/978-3-531-94149-3 (Online).

Stenbeck, Magnus, Gunnar Andersson, Anita Berglund, Erik Bihagen, Jesper Lagergren, Xavier de Luna, Anna Rignell-Hydbom, Weimin Ye, and Anna Holmström, Eds, 2013. Svenska register: En unik resurs för hälsa och välfärd. SIMSAM-INFRA.

Stenbeck, Magnus, Gunnar Andersson, Anita Berglund, Erik Bihagen, Jesper Lagergren, Xavier de Luna, Anna Rignell-Hydbom, Weimin Ye, and Anna Holmström, Eds, 2013. Swedish Registers: A Unique Resource for Health and Welfare. SIMSAM-INFRA.

2012 Kreyenfeld, Michaela, Gunnar Andersson, and Ariane Pailhé, 2012. Economic Uncertainty and Family Dynamics in Europe. Edited Special Collection 12 of Demographic Research. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/special/12. Kreyenfeld, Michaela, Gunnar Andersson, and Ariane Pailhé, 2012. “Economic uncertainty and family dynamics in Europe: Introduction”. Demographic Research 27(28): 835-852. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol27/28.

Lundström, Karin E., and Gunnar Andersson, 2012. “Labor-market status, migrant status, and first childbearing in Sweden”. Demographic Research 27(25): 719-742. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol27/25.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2012. “Fecundidade e contextos sociais: o caso dos países nórdicos”. In:

Roteiros do Futuro – Conferência “Nascer em Portugal”: 49-64. Conference proceedings.

Lisbóa: Casa Civil da Presidência da República.

2011 Andersson, Gunnar, and Martin Kolk, 2011. “Trends in childbearing and nuptiality in Sweden: An update with data up to 2007”. Finnish Yearbook of Population Research 2011: 21-29.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2011. “Family policies and fertility in Sweden”. In: Takayama, N., and Werding, M., Eds, Fertility and Public Policy: How to Reverse the Trend of Declining Birth Rates: 203-218. Cambridge MA and London: MIT-Press. Troitskaia, Irina, and Gunnar Andersson, 2011. “Perekhod k sovremennoi kontratseptsii v Rossii [Transition to modern contraception in Russia]”. In: Troitskaia, I., and Avdeev, A., Eds, Rozhdaemost' i planirovanie sem'i v Rossii: istorija i perspektivy [Fertility and Family Planning in Russia: History and Perspectives]: 61-86. Demographic Studies, Vol.18. Moscow: TEIS. ISBN 978-5-7218-1230-9.

2010 Andersson, Gunnar, and Turid Noack, 2010. “Legal advances and demographic developments of same-sex unions in Scandinavia”. Zeitschrift für Familienforschung / Journal of Family Research 22, Sonderheft 2010: 87-101. Andersson, Gunnar, 2010. Book review: “Gavin Jones, Paulin Tay Straughan and Angelique Chan (eds.): Ultra-low fertility in Pacific Asia”. Journal of Population Research 27(3): 241-242.

Andersson, Gunnar, and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2010. “Barnafödande och familjepolitik i kristider”. In: Global kris – Håller välfärdssystemen?: 49-59. Social Insurance Report 2010:6. Stockholm: Försäkringskassan. Duvander, Ann-Zofie, Trude Lappegård, and Gunnar Andersson, 2010. “Family policy and fertility: Fathers’ and mothers’ use of parental leave and continued childbearing in Norway and Sweden”. Journal of European Social Policy 20(1): 45-57.

2009 Andersson, Gunnar, Marit Rønsen, Lisbeth Knudsen, Trude Lappegård, Gerda Neyer, Kari Skrede, Kathrin Teschner, and Andres Vikat, 2009. “Cohort fertility patterns in the Nordic countries”. Demographic Research 20(14): 313-352. Available http://www.demographic- research.org/Volumes/Vol20/14. Kulu, Hill, Paul Boyle, and Gunnar Andersson, 2009. “High suburban fertility: Evidence from four Northern European countries”. Demographic Research 21(31): 915-944. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol21/31. Andersson, Gunnar, 2009. “Family policies in Sweden and the Swedish life-cycle model”. In: von der Leyen, U., and Spidla, V., Eds, Voneinender lernen – miteinander handeln: Aufgaben und Perspektiven derEuropäischer Allianz für Familien: 159-170. Baden-Baden: Nomos.

2008 Neyer, Gerda, and Gunnar Andersson, 2008. “Consequences of family policies on childbearing behavior: Effects or artifacts?” Population and Development Review 34(4): 699-724. Andersson, Gunnar, 2008. “A review of policies and practices related to the “highest-low” fertility of Sweden”. Vienna Yearbook of Population Research 2008: 89-102.

Hank, Karsten, Gunnar Andersson, and Hans-Peter Kohler, 2008. ”Sohn oder Tochter, Natur oder Kultur? Geschlechterpräferenzen für Kinder im europeischen Vergleich“. In: Rehberg, K.-S., Ed., Die Natur der Gesellschaft, Verhandlungen des 33. Kongresses der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie in Kassel 2006 (CD-ROM): 1671-1679. Frankfurt: Campus Verlag. 2007 Andersson, Gunnar, 2007-2008. “Selectivity in higher-order childbearing in Sweden”. Finnish Yearbook of Population Research 43: 33-40. Andersson, Gunnar, Karsten Hank, and Andres Vikat, 2007. “Understanding parental gender preferences in advanced societies: Lessons from Sweden and Finland”. Demographic Research 17(6): 135-156. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol17/6. Also as reprint in: Mukherjee, D., Ed., 2008. Girl Child. Issues, Perspectives and Initiatives: 129-150. Hyderabad: The Icfai University Press. And as reprint in: Bhatnagar, M., Ed., 2009. Gender Ratio Imbalance: Creating Societal Instability: 154-175. Hyderabad: The Icfai University Press.

Nedoluzhko, Lesia, and Gunnar Andersson, 2007. “Migration and first-time parenthood: Evidence

from Kyrgyzstan”. Demographic Research 17(25): 741-774. Available

http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol17/25.

Andersson, Gunnar, and Kirk Scott, 2007. “Childbearing dynamics of couples in a universalistic welfare state: The role of labor-market status, country of origin, and gender”. Demographic Research 17(30): 897-938. Available http://www.demographic- research.org/Volumes/Vol17/30.

Kulu, Hill, Andres Vikat, and Gunnar Andersson, 2007. “Settlement size and fertility in the Nordic countries”. Population Studies 61(3): 265-285. Neyer, Gerda, Jan Hoem, and Gunnar Andersson, 2007. “Kinderlosigkeit, Bildungsrichtung und Bildungsniveau. Ergebnisse einer Untersuchung schwedischer Frauen der Geburtenjahrgänge 1955-59”. In: Konietzka, D., and Kreyenfeld, M., Eds, Ein Leben ohne Kinder – Kinderlosigkeit in Deutschland: 105-134. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften.

Billari, Francesco, Hans-Peter Kohler, Gunnar Andersson, and Hans Lundström, 2007. “Approaching the limit: Long-term trends in late and very late fertility”. Population and Development Review 33(1): 149-170.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2007. “Familienpolitik und soziale Sicherung in Schweden”. GVG Informationsdienst 318: 9-11. Köln: Gesellschaft für Versicherungswissenschaft und - gestaltung e.V.

2006 Andersson, Gunnar, Turid Noack, Ane Seierstad, and Harald Weedon-Fekjær, 2006. “The demographics of same-sex marriages in Norway and Sweden”. Demography 43(1): 79-98.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2006. “11 år av partnerskap i Sverige”. Välfärd No. 2/2006: 22-23. Andersson, Gunnar, Karsten Hank, Marit Rønsen, and Andres Vikat, 2006. “Gendering family composition: Sex preferences for children and childbearing behavior in the Nordic countries”. Demography 43(2): 255-267.

Andersson, Gunnar, Jan Hoem, and Ann-Zofie Duvander, 2006. “Social differentials in speed- premium effects in childbearing in Sweden”. Demographic Research 14(4): 51-70. Available

http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol14/4.

Hoem, Jan, Gerda Neyer, and Gunnar Andersson, 2006. “Education and childlessness: The

relationship between educational field, educational level, and childlessness among Swedish women born in 1955-59”. Demographic Research 14(15): 331-380. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol14/15. Hoem, Jan, Gerda Neyer, and Gunnar Andersson, 2006. “Educational attainment and ultimate fertility among Swedish women born in 1955-59”. Demographic Research 14(16): 381-404. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol14/16. Duvander, Ann-Zofie, and Gunnar Andersson, 2006. “Gender equality and fertility in Sweden: A study on the impact of the father’s uptake of parental leave on continued childbearing”. Marriage and Family Review 39(1/2): 121-142.

Neyer, Gerda, Gunnar Andersson, Jan Hoem, Marit Rønsen, and Andres Vikat, 2006. “Fertilität, Familiengründung und Familienerweiterung in den nordischen Ländern”. In: Bertram, H.,

Krüger, H., and Spiess, K., Eds, Wem gehört die Familie der Zukunft? Expertisen zum 7. Familienbericht der Bundesregierung: 207-233. Opladen: Verlag Barbara Budrich.

2005 Andersson, Gunnar, and Kirk Scott, 2005. “Labour-market status and first-time parenthood: The experience of immigrant women in Sweden, 1981-97”. Population Studies 59(1): 21-38. Andersson, Gunnar, Ann-Zofie Duvander, and Karsten Hank, 2005. “Erwerbsstatus und Familienentwicklung in Schweden aus paarbezogener Perspektive“. In: Tölke, A. and Hank, K., Eds, Männer – Das ‚vernachlässigte’ Geschlecht in der Familienforschung [Sonderheft 4

der Zeitschrift für Familienforschung]: 220-234. Wiesbaden: VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften. 2004 Andersson, Gunnar, 2004. “Childbearing after migration: Fertility patterns of foreign-born women in Sweden”. International Migration Review 38(2): 747-775. Andersson, Gunnar, Ann-Zofie Duvander, and Karsten Hank, 2004. “Do child-care characteristics influence continued child bearing in Sweden? An investigation of the quantity, quality, and price dimension”. Journal of European Social Policy 14(4): 407-418.

Andersson, Gunnar, and Gerda Neyer, 2004. Contemporary Research on European Fertility: Perspectives and Developments. Edited Special Collection 3 of Demographic Research.

Available http://www.demographic-research.org.

Neyer, Gerda, and Gunnar Andersson, 2004. “Contemporary Research on European Fertility: Introduction”. Demographic Research Special Collection 3(1): 1-14. Available http://www.demographic-research.org.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2004. “Childbearing developments in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden from the 1970s to the 1990s: A comparison”. Demographic Research Special Collection 3(7): 155- 176. Available http://www.demographic-research.org. Andersson, Gunnar, 2004. “Demographic trends in Sweden: An update of childbearing and nuptiality up to 2002”. Demographic Research 11(4): 95-110. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol11/4. Andersson, Gunnar, and Nadja Milewski, 2004. “Nicht nur das siebte Jahr hat´s in sich: Drei von vier Ehepaaren in Deutschland und Österreich können 15. Hochzeitstag feiern”. Demografische Forschung Aus Erster Hand 1(2): 4. Hank, Karsten, Gunnar Andersson, Ann-Zofie Duvander, Michaela Kreyenfeld, and C. Katharina Spieß, 2004. “Öffentliche Kinderbetreuung und individuelle Fertilitätsentscheidungen in Deutschland und Schweden”. In: Stöbel-Richter, Y., and Brähler, E., Eds, Demographischer

und sozialer Wandel [Psychosozial Nr. 95, 27-1]: 47-57. Gießen: Psychosozial-Verlag.

Duvander, Ann-Zofie, and Gunnar Andersson, 2004. Leder delad föräldrapenning till fler barn?

En studie om hur pappor och mammors föräldrapenninguttag påverkar benägenheten att

skaffa ytterligare barn. Riksförsäkringsverket analyserar, 2004:15, Stockholm.

2003 Duvander, Ann-Zofie, and Gunnar Andersson, 2003. När har vi råd att skaffa fler barn? En studie om hur inkomst påverkar fortsatt barnafödande. Riksförsäkringsverket analyserar, 2003:8, Stockholm. 2002 Andersson, Gunnar, 2002. “Children’s experience of family disruption and family formation: Evidence from 16 FFS countries”. Demographic Research 7(7): 343-364. Available http://www.demographic-research.org/Volumes/Vol7/7. Also as a reprint in: Vienna Yearbook

of Population Research 2004: 313-332.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2002. “Dissolution of unions in Europe: A comparative overview”. Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft 27: 493-504.

Andersson, Gunnar, and Dimiter Philipov, 2002. “Life-table representations of family dynamics in Sweden, Hungary, and 14 other FFS countries: A project of descriptions of demographic behavior”. Demographic Research 7(4): 67-270. Available http://www.demographic- research.org/Volumes/Vol7/4. Andersson, Gunnar, 2002. “Fertility developments in Norway and Sweden since the early 1960s”. Demographic Research 6(4): 67-86. Available http://www.demographic- research.org/Volumes/Vol6/4.

Andersson, Gunnar, and Henriette Engelhardt, 2002. Stichwort “Zensus”. In: Endruweit, G., and Trommsdorff, G., Eds, Wörterbuch der Soziologie: 714-715. UTB Bd 2232. Stuttgart: Lucius & Lucius.

2001 Andersson, Gunnar, 2001. “Trends in childbearing and nuptiality in Sweden, 1961(71)-1997”. Scandinavian Population Studies 12: 67-100. [Tedebrand, L.-G., Sköld, P., Eds, Nordic Demography in History and Present-Day Society. Umeå, Sweden: Umeå University.]

Andersson, Gunnar, 2001. “Mortality in Stockholm: Recent past, present, and future”.

Scandinavian Population Studies 12: 387-408. [Tedebrand, L.-G., Sköld, P., Eds, Nordic

Demography in History and Present-Day Society. Umeå, Sweden: Umeå University.]

Andersson, Gunnar, and Gebremariam Woldemicael, 2001. “Sex composition of children as a determinant of marriage disruption and marriage formation: Evidence from Swedish register data”. Journal of Population Research 18: 143-153.

Andersson, Gunnar, and Liu Guiping, 2001. “Demographic trends in Sweden: Childbearing developments in 1961-1999, marriage and divorce developments in 1971-1999”. Demographic Research [Online] 5: 65-78. Updated as: “Demographic trends in Sweden: Childbearing developments in 1961-2000, marriage and divorce developments in 1971-1999”. Demographic Research [Online] 5: A1-A14. Available http://www.demographic- research.org/Volumes/Vol5/3. 2000 Andersson, Gunnar, 2000. “The impact of labour-force participation on childbearing behavior: Pro-cyclical fertility in Sweden during the 1980s and the 1990s”. European Journal of Population 16(4): 293-333.

Hoem, Jan, et al., 2000. “Concepts for a second round of Fertility and Family Surveys in Europe with particular attention paid to persons of reproductive/working age”. In: United Nations

Economic Commission for Europe/United Nations Population Fund (eds), Generations and Gender Programme: Exploring Future Research and Data Collection Options. United Nations, Geneva. 1999 Andersson, Gunnar, 1999. Trends in Childbearing and Nuptiality in Sweden: A Period Analysis. Stockholm University Demography Unit - Dissertation Series, No. 2. Andersson, Gunnar, 1999. “Childbearing trends in Sweden 1961-1997”. European Journal of Population 15(1): 1-24. 1998 Andersson, Gunnar, 1998. “Trends in marriage formation in Sweden 1971-1993”. European Journal of Population 14(2): 157-178. Andersson, Gunnar, 1998. “Giftermålsboom gav stabilare äktenskap”. Välfärdsbulletinen No. 4/98: 26-27. Andersson, Gunnar, and Siv Schéele, 1998. Från glesbygd till storstad? En kunskapsöversikt om flyttströmmar. Stockholm: Svenska Kommunförbundet. 1997 Andersson, Gunnar, 1997. “The impact of children on divorce risks of Swedish women”. European Journal of Population 13(2): 109-145. Andersson, Gunnar, 1997. “Låg skilsmässorisk bland medelålders”. Välfärdsbulletinen No. 5/97: 4-6. 1996 Andersson, Gunnar, 1996. “Risken för skilsmässa ökar”. Välfärdsbulletinen No. 1/96: 19-21. Andersson, Gunnar, 1996. “Rekordlågt barnafödande”. Välfärdsbulletinen No. 6/96: 4-5.

1995 Andersson, Gunnar, 1995. “Divorce-risk trends in Sweden 1971-1993”. European Journal of Population 11(4): 293-311. Andersson, Gunnar, 1995. “Giftermåls- och skilsmässoutvecklingen i Sverige 1971-1994”. Befolkningsstatistik 1994, del 4: 102-103. Statistics Sweden.

ADDITIONAL: WORKING AND CONFERENCE PAPERS

Aradhya, Siddartha, Maria Brandén, Sven Drefahl, Ognjen Obućina, Gunnar Andersson, Mikael Rostila, Eleonora Mussino and Sol Juárez. ”Lack of acculturation does not explain excess COVID-19 mortality among immigrants: A population-based cohort study”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2020:44.

Rostila, Mikael, Agneta Cederström, Matthew Wallace, Maria Brandén, Bo Malmberg, and Gunnar Andersson. ”Disparities in Covid-19 deaths by country of birth in Stockholm, Sweden: A total population based cohort study”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2020:39.

Billingsley, Sunnee, Maria Brandén, Siddartha Aradhya, Sven Drefahl, Gunnar Andersson, and Eleonora Mussino, 2020. ”Deaths in the frontline: Occupation-specific COVID-19 mortality risks in Sweden”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2020:36.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2020. “A review of policies and practices related to the “highest-low” fertility of Sweden: A 2020 update”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2020:46.

Andersson, Gunnar, 2020. “Family behavior of migrants: An overview”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2020:32.

Mussino, Eleonora, Ben Wilson and Gunnar Andersson, 2020. ”The fertility of immigrants from low fertility settings: Adaptation in the tempo and quantum of childbearing?” Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2020:22.

Deiters, Maximilian, Gerda Neyer and Gunnar Andersson, 2019. “Policy receptiveness as determinant of policy effectiveness: German childcare and women’s transition to first birth”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2019:22.

Holland, Jennifer, Brienna Perelli-Harris, and Gunnar Andersson. “”Does marriage matter?” revisited: The fertility, mortality and stability of the Swedish 1989 marriage boom cohort”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2017:29.

Neyer, Gerda, and Gunnar Andersson. “Gendering occupation and fertility: A comparison between women’s and men’s childbearing behavior by occupational branches”. Presented at the European Population Conference 2012, Stockholm, 13-16 June.

Thomson, Elizabeth, Gunnar Andersson, Johan Carlsson Dahlberg and Johan Tollebrant, 2015. “A Swedish Generations and Gender Survey: Questionnaires in English translation”. Stockholm Research Reports in Demography 2015:16.

von der Lippe, Holger, and Gunnar Andersson, 2005. “Becoming a parent in East Germany during the 1990s: The impact of personal considerations on the timing of entry to parenthood”. MPIDR Working Paper, WP 2005-008. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock.

Erlangsen, Annette, and Gunnar Andersson, 2001. “The impact of children on divorce risks in first and later marriages”. MPIDR Working Paper, WP 2001-033. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock.

SELECTED INVITED PRESENTATIONS

“Social policy and fertility change in the Nordic countries”. Presentation at Social Policy Colloquium at the Hertie School of Governance. Berlin, October 28, 2019. Similar presentations on recent period and cohort fertility change in the Nordic countries were given at the Väestöliitto, Helsinki, Oxford University, and the Hungarian Demographic Research Institute, Budapest, in late 2019 - early 2020.

“Addressing the demographic issue”. Presentation in the Greek Parliament for the parliamentary committees on Social Affairs and Demography. Athens, May 29, 2018.

“Sweden 10 Million – with many well-recorded demographic events”. Keynote presentation at PopFest 2017, The 25th Annual Population Postgraduate Conference of the British Society for Population Studies, Stockholm 31 May– 2 June 2017.

“Nordic Demographic Societies: Small populations, great data”. Keynote presentation at the Population Days of the Italian Association for Population Studies, Florence 8 February 2017.

“Demographic data and demographic challenges: The Nordic case”. Presentation for the Mie University Graduate School of Medicine, 28 November 2016.

“Gender change and policy change in relation to fathers: The Nordic case”. Keynote plenary presentation to the 42nd Quetelet Conference 2016 on Men’s perspectives in unions, fertility and parenthood, Louvain-la-Neuve 9-10 November 2016.

“Causation in demography: Micro and macro perspectives”. Forte Network Meeting on Methodological issues in registry-based research, Ystad 8-9 September 2016.

“One for all: Marriage in Sweden / Eine für Alle: Die Ehe in Schweden”. Presentation to the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung in Berlin, 7 November 2014.

“Comparative research in Demography”. Award presentation to the XXVIIth IUSSP conference in Busan, Korea, 31 August 2013.

“Human fertility and social contexts: The northern countries”. Presentation to the Presidency of Portugal at the Lisbon Conference on European and Portuguese Fertility Decline. Cascais, February 2012.

“National civil registration and vital statistics in Sweden and the other Nordic countries”. Paper presented at Lundis de l’Ined, Ined, Paris, June 2010.

“International migration and family-demographic change: The case of Sweden”. Presented to Postgraduate Training Seminar in Demography, Statistics and Health at Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, Madrid, March 2010.

“Childbearing and family policy in times of economic recession” [Barnafödande och familjepolitik i kristider]. Presentation at research seminar of the National Social Insurance Agency, “Global Crisis: Are the Welfare Systems Robust?”, Umeå, January 2010.

“Family forerunners? Family dynamics in the Nordic countries versus Europe”. Keynote plenary presentation to The 16th Nordic Demographic Symposium, Helsinki, June 2008.

“Muslim integration and fertility in Sweden”. Presented to the workshop on Muslim Integration in Europe: The Demographic Dimension, organized by the Brookings Institution and the Council on Foreign Relations, American Academy in Berlin, April 2008.

OVERVIEW OF PRESENTATIONS AT CONFERENCES & PROFESSIONAL MEETINGS

Presentation of papers The XXVIIth, XXVIth, XXVth, and XXIVth IUSSP General Population at demographic Conferences in Busan, 2013, Marrakech, 2009, Tours, 2005, and Salvador de conferences: Bahia, 2001. The European Population Conferences in Mainz, 2016, Budapest, 2014, Stockholm, 2012, Wien, 2010, Barcelona, 2008, Liverpool, 2006, Warsaw, 2003, and The Hague, 1999.

The annual meetings of the Population Association of America in Dallas, 2010,

Los Angeles, 2006, Boston, 2004, Minneapolis, 2003, Washington DC, 2001, and New York, 1999. The 21st, 20th, 19th, 18th, 17th, 16th, 15th, 14th, 13th, and 11th Nordic Demographic Symposiums in Iceland 2019, Finland 2017, Denmark, 2014, Norway, 2012, Sweden, 2010, Finland, 2008, Denmark, 2005, Norway, 2001, Sweden, 1999, Finland, 1995.

Presentations at specific Workshop on Lowest Low Fertility, 1999, Rostock, Germany. workshops/conferences: NOSOSKO Conference on Childbearing in the Nordic Countries (“Barnafödande i Norden”), 2001, Stockholm. The 1st and 3rd Conference of the European Research Network on Divorce in Florence, 2002, and Köln, 2004. “Das vernachlässigte Geschlecht in der Familienforschung: Analysen zum Heirats- und Geburtenverhalten von Männern in Deutschland”, 2003, Rostock. Recent Fertility Trends in Northern Europe, 2003, Oslo. Day of Swedish Demography, 2003 and 2009, Statistics Sweden, Stockholm. Registered Partnerships and Same-Sex Marriages in Europe, 2003, Stockholm University.

Contemporary Research on European Fertility, 2004, Rostock.

Theory and Practice of the Censuses in Bulgaria, 2004, Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria.

Nordic Population Research at Statistics Sweden and MPIDR, 2004, Rostock.

The 2004 European Social Science and History Conference, Berlin.

The 37th World Congress of the International Institute of Sociology, 2005,

Stockholm.

What’s New about European Demography? Seminar in Riga, 2005, organized by the Nordic Council of Minister and the French Embassy. The Family in the Future – the Future of the Family: The Gender Story, 2005, Stockholm. Life History Events Analysis in Epidemiology and Fertility Studies, 2005, Bordeaux. Interdependencies in the Life Course: Family Dynamics, Childbearing, and Spatial Mobility, 2006, Rostock. 8. GVG-Euroforum on Familienpolitik und soziale Sicherung in Europa, Gesellschaft für Versicherungswissenschaft und -gestaltung, 2006, Berlin.

Nordiska statistikermötet 2007, Reykjavik.

International Conference Demographic Change, Leibniz Gemeinschaft, 2007, Berlin. Social Exclusion and the Changing Demographic Portrait of Europe, EAPS, 2007, Budapest. Changes in Family Structures, Fertility Trends and Parenthood Practices in the Nordic Countries, 2007, Klaekken/Oslo.

Can Policies Enhance Fertility in Europe?, Vienna Institute of Demography, 2007. Fertility and Public Policy: How to Reverse the Trend of Declining Birth Rates, Hitotsubashi University and CESifo, 2008, Munich.

Muslim Integration in Europe: The Demographic Dimension, the Brookings

Institution and Council on Foreign Relations, American Academy in Berlin,

2008.

Family Changes in Industrialized Countries, Centre for Advanced Study at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, 2008, Windsor, UK. Global Crisis: Are the Welfare Systems Robust?, National Social Insurance Agency, 2010, Umeå. Framtidsfokus on Marriage, SUDA and the Institute for Futures Studies, 2010, Stockholm; broadcasted by Utbildningsradion at the Swedish National Television.

Meeting on the Low Danish Birth Rates: Causes, Relationships and Social

Perspectives, Rigshospitalet, 2011, Copenhagen.

Lisbon Conference on European and Portuguese Fertility Decline, 2012, Cascais. NECTAR Conference on Dynamics of Global and Local Networks, 2013, St. Miguel, Azores. Symposium on Considerations for an Approach to the Issue of Low Fertility based on Evidence in Japan, 2016, Tsu, Mie Prefecture, Japan.

The 8th Nordic Meeting in Epidemiology and Registry-based Research,

NordicEpi, 2017, Lund.

Understanding Society Scientific Conference 2017, University of Essex. Children in Migrant or Ethnic Minorities: Demographic and Social Processes in a Comparative Perspective, 2019, Rostock. Fertility Decline in the Nordic Countries, 2019, Klaekken/Oslo.

Registerforskningsdagen, 2019, Stockholm.

Invited presentations at Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute, Canberra. colloquiums etc.: Center for Demography and Ecology at University of Wisconsin-Madison. Centre for Population Change at University of Southampton. Centre for Population Studies at Umeå University. Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, Madrid. Department of Economic History at Lund University. Hertie School of Governance, Berlin. Hungarian Demographic Research Institute, Budapest. Institut für Demographie der Österreichichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien. Institut national d’études démographiques, Paris. Institute for Gender Studies, London School of Economics. Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock. Mie University, Graduate School of Medicine. National Social Insurance Agency, Stockholm. Oxford University Department of Sociology. Statistics Norway, Oslo. Stockholm International Researchers Association. Stockholm University Demography Unit. Stockholm University Department of Sociology. Tallinn University, Estonian Institute for Population Studies. United Nations Population Division, New York.