Lindstrom David P, Muñoz-Franco Elisa
Department of Sociology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
Stud Fam Plann. 2005 Dec;36(4):277-88. doi: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2005.00070.x.
This article uses the concept of social networks as it is employed in the research literature on family planning and migration to explore the impact of out-migration on modern contraceptive knowledge and use in rural Guatemala. Data for this study come from the 1995 Guatemalan Survey of Family Health. Results from multilevel regression models indicate that urban migration experience, having migrant kin in urban or international destinations, and living in a community where urban migration is common are all associated with greater contraceptive knowledge. Social ties to urban or international migrants are also associated with a greater likelihood of modern contraceptive use among married women, but this association works primarily through increased contraceptive knowledge. The findings of significant diffusion effects provide support for recent theories of fertility decline that emphasize the role of social interactions.
本文运用了计划生育与移民研究文献中所使用的社会网络概念,以探究外出移民对危地马拉农村地区现代避孕知识及使用情况的影响。本研究的数据来自1995年危地马拉家庭健康调查。多层次回归模型的结果表明,城市移民经历、在城市或国际目的地有移民亲属以及生活在城市移民普遍的社区,都与更多的避孕知识相关。与城市或国际移民的社会联系也与已婚女性使用现代避孕方法的可能性更大相关,但这种关联主要是通过增加避孕知识来实现的。显著的扩散效应研究结果为强调社会互动作用的近期生育率下降理论提供了支持。