Fahey Tony
School of Social Policy, Social Work and Social Justice, University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Demography. 2017 Jun;54(3):813-834. doi: 10.1007/s13524-017-0568-0.
This article points to a sharp decline in children's sibling numbers (sibsize) that occurred in the United States since the 1970s and was large enough among children with lower socioeconomic status (SES) (particularly black children) to amount to a revolution in their family circumstances. It interprets sibsize decline as a source of social convergence in children's family contexts that ran counter to trends toward social divergence caused by the rise of lone parenthood. The article is based on new estimates of differences in children's sibsize and lone parenthood by race and maternal education generated from public-use samples from the Census of Population and Current Population Survey (CPS), focusing especially on the period 1940-2012. I discuss some methodological and substantive challenges for existing scholarship arising from the findings and point to questions for future research.
本文指出,自20世纪70年代以来,美国儿童的兄弟姐妹数量(家庭规模)急剧下降,而且在社会经济地位较低(SES)的儿童(尤其是黑人儿童)中下降幅度很大,足以构成其家庭环境的一场变革。它将家庭规模的下降解释为儿童家庭环境中社会趋同的一个来源,这与单亲家庭增加导致的社会分化趋势背道而驰。本文基于对人口普查和当前人口调查(CPS)公开样本中按种族和母亲教育程度划分的儿童家庭规模和单亲家庭差异的新估计,特别关注1940 - 2012年这一时期。我讨论了现有学术研究因这些发现而面临的一些方法和实质性挑战,并指出了未来研究的问题。