Nottingham University Business School, Jubilee Campus, Nottingham, UK.
Theology, St Mary's University, Twickenham, UK.
Health Econ. 2020 Jul;29(7):790-807. doi: 10.1002/hec.4021. Epub 2020 Apr 24.
To date most studies of the impact of school-based sex education have focused either on specific, local interventions or experiences at a national level. In this paper, we use a new cross-country dataset to explore the extent to which laws on sex education affect teenage pregnancy rates in developed countries. We find some evidence that laws mandating sex education in schools are associated with higher rates of teenage fertility. Parental opt out laws may minimise adverse effects of sex education mandates for younger teens. The estimated effects of mandatory sex education are robust to some but not all of our specifications designed to tease out causality. Taken together, changes in national laws relating to sexual health are unable to explain the significant declines in teenage pregnancy rates, which have been observed in many developed countries in recent years.
迄今为止,大多数关于学校性教育影响的研究要么集中在特定的、局部的干预措施上,要么集中在国家层面的经验上。在本文中,我们使用一个新的跨国数据集来探讨性教育法律在多大程度上影响发达国家的青少年怀孕率。我们发现一些证据表明,在学校规定性教育的法律与较高的青少年生育率有关。父母选择退出法律可能会最小化性教育规定对青少年的不利影响。在我们为了梳理因果关系而设计的一些规范中,对强制性性教育的估计效果是稳健的,但并非所有规范都是如此。总的来说,近年来,许多发达国家都观察到青少年怀孕率的显著下降,而与性健康相关的国家法律的变化却无法对此做出解释。