1. Intergenerational transmission of reproductive behavior during the demographic transition.
- Author
-
Jennings JA, Sullivan AR, and Hacker JD
- Subjects
- Data Collection economics, Data Collection history, Family ethnology, Family history, Family psychology, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, History, 21st Century, Humans, Statistics as Topic economics, Statistics as Topic education, Statistics as Topic history, Utah ethnology, Women education, Women history, Women psychology, Age Factors, Birth Intervals ethnology, Birth Intervals psychology, Fertility, Intergenerational Relations ethnology, Population Dynamics history, Reproductive Behavior ethnology, Reproductive Behavior history, Reproductive Behavior physiology, Reproductive Behavior psychology
- Abstract
New evidence from the Utah Population Database (UPDP) reveals that at the onset of the fertility transition, reproductive behavior was transmitted across generations - between women and their mothers, as well as between women and their husbands' family of origin. Age at marriage, age at last birth, and the number of children ever born are positively correlated in the data, most strongly among first-born daughters and among cohorts born later in the fertility transition. Intergenerational ties, including the presence of mothers and mothers-in-law, influenced the hazard of progressing to a next birth. The findings suggest that the practice of parity-dependent marital fertility control and inter-birth spacing behavior derived, in part, from the previous generation and that the potential for mothers and mothers-in-law to help in the rearing of children encouraged higher marital fertility.
- Published
- 2012
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