Edmeades Jeffrey
International Institute for Research on Women, 1120 20th Street NW, Suite 500 N, Washington, DC 20036, USA.
Demography. 2008 May;45(2):283-302. doi: 10.1353/dem.0.0004.
This study explores the ways in which women's contraceptive behavior in a rural area of Thailand is shaped by both past and present context, based on the life course framework. Although the importance of contextual influences for contraceptive behavior is well established in the literature, relatively little research has been conducted that explores how behavior is influenced by historical and contemporaneous contextual factors and by individual life experiences. In addition, much of this research has neglected the role of the normative environment within which contraceptive use takes place. The focus of this paper centers on the effect of contraceptive environment at both early and late stages of the life course and on how this effect is shaped by individual experience with migration to urban areas. This study takes advantage of a unique, prospective longitudinal data set with detailed information on community context at multiple points in time, an important improvement upon prior research. The results show that contraceptive behavior is particularly responsive to current community context, with past context primarily exerting an indirect effect on behavior through shaping current contextual influences.
本研究基于生命历程框架,探讨泰国农村地区女性避孕行为受过去和当前背景影响的方式。尽管文献中已充分证实背景影响对避孕行为的重要性,但相对较少有研究探讨行为如何受到历史和同期背景因素以及个人生活经历的影响。此外,这类研究大多忽视了避孕行为发生所处规范环境的作用。本文重点关注生命历程早期和晚期避孕环境的影响,以及这种影响如何因个人向城市地区迁移的经历而形成。本研究利用了一个独特的前瞻性纵向数据集,该数据集在多个时间点提供了关于社区背景的详细信息,这是对先前研究的一项重要改进。结果表明,避孕行为对当前社区背景特别敏感,过去的背景主要通过塑造当前的背景影响对行为产生间接作用。