Nath D C, Land K C
Department of Sociology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
J Biosoc Sci. 1994 Jul;26(3):377-88. doi: 10.1017/s0021932000021453.
The traditional preference for sons may be the main hindrance to India's current population policy of two children per family. In this study, the effects of various sociodemographic covariates, particularly sex preference, on the length of the third birth interval are examined for the scheduled caste population in Assam, India. Life table and hazards regression techniques are applied to retrospective sample data. The analysis shows that couples having two surviving sons are less likely to have a third child than those without a surviving son and those with only one surviving son. Age at first marriage, length of preceding birth intervals, age of mother, and household income have strong effects on the length of the third birth interval.
传统的重男轻女观念可能是印度当前每家两个孩子的人口政策的主要障碍。在本研究中,针对印度阿萨姆邦的在册种姓人口,考察了各种社会人口统计学协变量,尤其是性别偏好,对第三次生育间隔时长的影响。运用生命表和风险回归技术对回顾性样本数据进行分析。结果表明,与没有存活儿子的夫妇以及只有一个存活儿子的夫妇相比,育有两个存活儿子的夫妇生育第三个孩子的可能性更小。初婚年龄、前次生育间隔时长、母亲年龄和家庭收入对第三次生育间隔时长有显著影响。