Isiugo-Abanihe U C
Department of Sociology, University of Ibadan, Nigeria.
Stud Fam Plann. 1994 May-Jun;25(3):149-61.
Data collected from 3,073 couples in four Nigerian cities and one semi-urban settlement were used to examine reproductive decision-making and male motivation for large family size. The report concludes that the characteristic male-dominant and patrilineal traditions support large family size and that men's reproductive motivation, to a large extent, affects the reproductive behavior of their wives. Therefore, the factors influencing men's reproductive outcomes and intentions are considered important for fertility transition in Nigeria. Male education, age at marriage, monogamy, interspousal communication, and intention not to rely on children for old-age support are significantly related to smaller actual family size and preferences for smaller families, while being in a male-dominant family setting has a strong relation with large family size and preferences for larger families. The policy implication of this study is the need for programs targeted at men and designed to change their attitudes about population matters and motivate them, and hence their wives, to produce smaller families.
从尼日利亚四个城市和一个半城市定居点的3073对夫妇收集的数据用于研究生育决策和男性想要大家庭的动机。该报告得出结论,典型的男性主导和父系传统支持大家庭规模,并且男性的生育动机在很大程度上影响其妻子的生育行为。因此,影响男性生育结果和意愿的因素被认为对尼日利亚的生育率转变很重要。男性教育程度、结婚年龄、一夫一妻制、夫妻间沟通以及不依赖子女养老的意愿与实际家庭规模较小和对小家庭的偏好显著相关,而处于男性主导的家庭环境与大家庭规模和对大家庭的偏好有很强的关联。这项研究的政策含义是需要针对男性制定项目,旨在改变他们对人口问题的态度并激励他们,进而激励他们的妻子生育规模更小的家庭。