Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Immigrant fertility in West Germany: Is there a socialization effect in transitions to second and third births?
Abstract In this paper on immigrant fertility in West Germany, we estimate the transition rates to second and third births, using intensity-regression models. The data come from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study. We distinguish women of the first and the second immigrant generations originating from Turkey, the former Yugoslavia, Greece, Italy, and Spain, and compare their fertility levels to those of West German women. In the theoretical framework, we discuss competing hypotheses on migrant fertility. The findings support mainly the socialization hypothesis: the transition rates of first-generation immigrants vary by country of origin, and the fertility patterns of migrant descendants resemble more closely those of West Germans than those of the first immigrant generation. In addition, the analyses show that fertility differentials between immigrants and women of the indigenous population can largely, though not in full, be explained by compositional differences.
Immigrant fertility in West Germany: Is there a socialization effect in transitions to second and third births?
Abstract In this paper on immigrant fertility in West Germany, we estimate the transition rates to second and third births, using intensity-regression models. The data come from the German Socio-Economic Panel Study. We distinguish women of the first and the second immigrant generations originating from Turkey, the former Yugoslavia, Greece, Italy, and Spain, and compare their fertility levels to those of West German women. In the theoretical framework, we discuss competing hypotheses on migrant fertility. The findings support mainly the socialization hypothesis: the transition rates of first-generation immigrants vary by country of origin, and the fertility patterns of migrant descendants resemble more closely those of West Germans than those of the first immigrant generation. In addition, the analyses show that fertility differentials between immigrants and women of the indigenous population can largely, though not in full, be explained by compositional differences.
Immigrant fertility in West Germany: Is there a socialization effect in transitions to second and third births?
Milewski, Nadja (Autor:in)
2010
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Welt , Demographie , Theorie , EU-Staaten
BKL:
74.80
Demographie
Welfare reform and immigrant fertility
Online Contents | 2016
|Welfare reform and immigrant fertility
Online Contents | 2016
|Online Contents | 2023
|The fertility effect of catastrophe: U.S. hurricane births
Online Contents | 2008
|The fertility effect of catastrophe: U.S. hurricane births
Online Contents | 2008
|