New Faces at MPIDR | June 28, 2024

Welcome Anwer Hossain!

The Laboratory of Fertility and Well-Being welcomes Md Anwer Hossain as a member to the team. Anwer joins MPIDR coming from the Department of Social Relations of the East West University in Bangladesh where he worked as a lecturer and taught undergraduate students in the Population and Public Health Sciences program.  More

July

02

non-public event

LabTalk with Benson John, Jonas Schöley, and Ricarda Duerst

1:00 PM: Benson John MPG Partner Group Proposal: New Perspectives On The Demography Of The Family In Sub-Saharan Africa
1:45 PM: Jonas Schöley & Ricarda DuerstThe Impact of Mortality Crises and Forecasting Uncertainty on Cohort Lifespan Uncertainty  More

All Events

New Issue 2/2024 available | June 26, 2024

The Quarterly German Newsletter

Career

Open Positions

Introduction to our research groups

BIOSFER

June 25, 2024

Parliamentary Members use Simpler Language on hot Days

Climate change has many widespread and complicated effects on the well-being of people and the planet, and a new study in iScience on June 13 has now added a surprising one to the list. After analyzing the language used in seven million parliamentary speeches around the world, it shows that high temperatures lead to a significant and immediate reduction in politicians’ language complexity.  More

Selected Publications

Basellini, U.; Camarda, C. G.; Booth, H.:

Thirty years on: a review of the Lee-Carter method for forecasting mortality   International Journal of Forecasting 39:3, 1033–1049. (2023)

Coimbra Vieira, C.; Lohmann, S.; Zagheni, E.:

The value of cultural similarity for predicting migration: evidence from food and drink interests in digital trace data   Population and Development Review, 1–28. (2024)

More Publications

Questions and Answers

Being a Researcher at the MPIDR

Working at MPIDR

Life & Research in Rostock

What is demography?

Glossary of Demographic Terms

New Publication | June 05, 2024

Mind the Gap: Italian Moms with 3+ Kids Work far Fewer Years than Dads, while Finland Shows Equality

A study by the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) shows that, in contrast to Finland, from midlife mothers in Italy and the US work significantly fewer years than fathers, especially if they have two and more children. The researchers highlight that better support and work opportunities for mothers not only improves their retirement security, but also helps stabilize pension systems.  More

The Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) in Rostock is one of the leading demographic research centers in the world. It's part of the Max Planck Society, the internationally renowned German research society.