Default: Vienna Yearbook of Population Research

ISSN: 1728-4414

Journal Home

Journal Guideline

Vienna Yearbook of Population Research Q1 Unclaimed

Verlag der Oesterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften Austria
Unfortunately this journal has not been claimed yet. For this reason, some information may be unavailable.

Vienna Yearbook of Population Research is a journal indexed in SJR in Demography with an H index of 29. It has a price of 2395 €. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,609 and it has a best quartile of Q1. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,609.

Type: Journal

Type of Copyright:

Languages:

Open Access Policy:

Type of publications:

Publication frecuency: -

WOS
Categories: Demography (Q1)
Price

2395 €

Inmediate OA

NPD

Embargoed OA

0 €

Non OA

Metrics

Vienna Yearbook of Population Research

0,609

SJR Impact factor

29

H Index

17

Total Docs (Last Year)

47

Total Docs (3 years)

873

Total Refs

77

Total Cites (3 years)

47

Citable Docs (3 years)

1.53

Cites/Doc (2 years)

51.35

Ref/Doc

Comments

No comments ... Be the first to comment!



Best articles by citations

What should be the goal of population policies? Focus on 'Balanced Human Capital Development'

View more

Working after age 50 in Spain. Is the trend towards early retirement reversing?

View more

The influence of the distribution of household and childrearing tasks between men and woman on childbearing intentions in Austria

View more

What can reverse causation tell us about demographic differences in the social network and social support determinants of self-rated health in later life?

View more

The Quantum and Tempo of Life-Cycle Events

View more

INTRODUCTION

View more

The Postponement of Childbearing in Europe: Driving Forces and Implications

View more

The Postponement of Motherhood and its Child Health Consequences: Birth Weight and Weight Gain during the First Year of Life

View more

Convergence or divergence of educational disparities in mortality and morbidity? The evolution of life expectancy and health expectancy by educational attainment in Austria in 1981-2006

View more

China's uncertain demographic present and future

View more

The search for a demography of education: some thoughts

View more

Familial transmission of human longevity: a population-based study in an inland village of Sardinia (Italy), 1850-2010

View more
SHOW MORE ARTICLES

Why we don't have to believe without doubting in the "Second Demographic Transition" - some agnostic comments.

View more

Towards a reconceptualising of population ageing in emerging markets

View more

Education or wealth: which matters more for reducing child mortality in developing countries?

View more

The Literacy Myth: literacy, education and demography

View more

Claiming for a demologic approach to demographic change

View more

Health, education, and retirement over the prolonged life cycle: a selective survey of recent research

View more

Evidence of resiliency among long-lived smokers

View more

Determinants of exceptional human longevity: new ideas and findings

View more

Lifetime abstainers and mortality risk in the United States

View more

Adjusting prospective old-age thresholds by health status: empirical findings and implications. A case study of Italy

View more

Persistence and change of the relative difference in educational attainment by ethno-cultural group and gender in Canada

View more

First, do no harm

View more

FAQS