Frye Margaret, Bachan Lauren
a Princeton University.
b Pennsylvania State University.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2017 Jul;71(2):187-209. doi: 10.1080/00324728.2017.1304565. Epub 2017 Apr 25.
This paper examines the decline in non-numeric responses to questions about fertility preferences among women in the developing world. These types of response-such as 'don't know' or 'it's up to God'-have often been interpreted through the lens of fertility transition theory as an indication that reproduction has not yet entered women's 'calculus of conscious choice'. However, this has yet to be investigated cross-nationally and over time. Using 19 years of data from 32 countries, we find that non-numeric fertility preferences decline most substantially in the early stages of a country's fertility transition. Using country-specific and multilevel models, we explore the individual- and contextual-level characteristics associated with women's likelihood of providing a non-numeric response to questions about their fertility preferences. Non-numeric fertility preferences are influenced by a host of social factors, with educational attainment and knowledge of contraception being the most robust and consistent predictors.
本文考察了发展中世界女性对生育偏好问题的非数字回答的减少情况。这类回答,比如“不知道”或“取决于上帝”,常常通过生育转变理论的视角被解读为一种迹象,表明生育尚未进入女性的“有意识选择的考量”。然而,这一点尚未在跨国和长期范围内得到研究。利用来自32个国家的19年数据,我们发现非数字生育偏好在一个国家生育转变的早期阶段下降最为显著。通过使用特定国家和多层次模型,我们探究了与女性对生育偏好问题给出非数字回答的可能性相关的个体层面和背景层面特征。非数字生育偏好受到一系列社会因素的影响,其中教育程度和避孕知识是最有力且一致的预测因素。