Newson Lesley, Postmes Tom, Lea S E G, Webley Paul
School of Psychology, University of Exeter, England.
Pers Soc Psychol Rev. 2005;9(4):360-75. doi: 10.1207/s15327957pspr0904_5.
As societies modernize, they go through what has become known as "the demographic transition;" couples begin to limit the size of their families. Models to explain this change assume that reproductive behavior is either under individual control or under social control. The evidence that social influence plays a role in the control of reproduction is strong, but the models cannot adequately explain why the development of small family norms always accompanies modernization. We suggest that the widening of social networks, which has been found to occur with modernization, is sufficient to explain the change in reproductive norms if it is assumed that (a) advice and comment on reproduction that passes among kin is more likely to encourage the creation of families than that which passes among nonkin and (b) this advice and comment influence the social norms induced from the communications. This would, through a process of cultural evolution, lead to the development of norms that make it increasingly difficult to have large families.
随着社会现代化,它们经历了所谓的“人口转变”;夫妻开始限制家庭规模。解释这种变化的模型假定生育行为要么受个人控制,要么受社会控制。社会影响在生育控制中发挥作用的证据很充分,但这些模型无法充分解释为什么小家庭规范的发展总是伴随着现代化。我们认为,已发现随着现代化出现的社会网络的扩大,如果假定(a)亲属之间传递的关于生育的建议和评论比非亲属之间传递的更有可能鼓励组建家庭,以及(b)这种建议和评论会影响从交流中衍生出的社会规范,那么就足以解释生育规范的变化。通过文化进化的过程,这将导致规范的发展,使得组建大家庭变得越来越困难。