Yeatman Sara, Sennott Christie
Assistant Professor, Department of Health and Behavioral Sciences, University of Colorado, Denver, P.O. Box 173364, Campus Box 188, Denver, CO 80217..
Stud Fam Plann. 2014 Sep;45(3):361-77. doi: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2014.00396.x.
Studies of the relative influence of partners' fertility preferences on behaviors tend to treat preferences as fixed, largely independent traits despite existing theoretical arguments and empirical evidence suggesting that they are moving targets that may be jointly developed within relationships. In this study, we use couple-level panel data from married and unmarried young adults in southern Malawi to examine the relationship between partners' family-size preferences. We find evidence of assortative mating: young Malawians are more likely to partner with individuals who have similar family-size goals. Additionally, although partners' family-size preferences do not perfectly converge, changes among men's and women's preferences are significantly more likely to be "toward" than "away from" those of their partner. Our findings point to a need for studies regarding the relative influence of partners on reproductive outcomes to consider the interdependence of partners' preferences and the varied ways in which partners can influence shared reproductive behaviors.
关于伴侣的生育偏好对行为的相对影响的研究倾向于将偏好视为固定的、基本独立的特征,尽管现有理论观点和实证证据表明它们是不断变化的目标,可能在关系中共同形成。在本研究中,我们使用来自马拉维南部已婚和未婚年轻人的夫妻层面面板数据,来检验伴侣间家庭规模偏好的关系。我们发现了 assortative mating 的证据:年轻的马拉维人更有可能与有相似家庭规模目标的人成为伴侣。此外,尽管伴侣的家庭规模偏好并未完全趋同,但男性和女性偏好的变化更有可能是“朝着”而非“背离”其伴侣的偏好。我们的研究结果表明,关于伴侣对生殖结果的相对影响的研究需要考虑伴侣偏好的相互依存性以及伴侣影响共同生殖行为的多种方式。