Culture and Fertility


Book Description

This paper, exploring the relationship between culture and fertility in Thailand, cites empirical evidence showing that each ethnic group's birth control practice is affected differently by different kinds of variables. For the Thais, birth control pactice is related to women's education and the number of live births. For the Chinese, place of residence, the level of household income and the number of children ever born are significantly related to the dependent variable. For the Moslems, none of these variables nor any of the other independent variables and covariates is significantly related to the practice of birth control. More research is needed in this area to find out what factors are most related to the adoption of birth control by the Muslims.










The Family, Fertility, and Contraception in Asia and the Pacific


Book Description

This report summarizes the outcome of "The Study on the Relationship between Fertility Behaviour and Size, Structure and Functions of the Family of the Family," which is funded by the UN Fund for Population Activities, the International Development Research Centre, the Government of Japan, and the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). The chapters in this report synthesize and draw on the reports of meetings held by the ESCAP secretariat and country experts to conceptualize and formulate the project, to discuss the results of the pretest, and to discuss the 1st country reports. These cross-cultural country studies raise a number of issues which have profound policy implications. A high degree of interaction with those members of the family obligation who might constitute the "extended family" is not necessarily detrimental to family planning adoption. The level of active discouragement by family planning by family members is less than program might suppose. Discouragement of family planning or pronatalist interventions did not come from all persons or categories of persons identified in the interactions table. The reinforcement of fertility norms across the entire extended family did not occur even in the most pronatalist societies. A rather unexpected result was the strength of interaction with non-kin friends and neighbors. These data suggest that the maintenance of existing family structures and interactions with family, friends, and neighbors may favor both family planning and old age security policy.







Fertility Transitions, Family Structure, And Population Policy


Book Description

Focuses on fertility and family transitions in selected Third World countries, exploring critical aspects of the relationship between population and development. The essays examine population processes as they unfold and develop over time, highlighting the need to go beyond economic explanations and identifying the priorities among social structura