The Secret History of Soviet Russia's Police State: Cruelty, Co-operation and Compromise, 1917–91
Dados Bibliográficos
AUTOR(ES) | |
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AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) | The Ohio State University, Pennsylvania State University, Brigham Young University |
ANO | 2020 |
TIPO | Book |
CITAÇÕES | 1 |
ADICIONADO EM | 2025-08-14 |
MD5 |
AFE3F6C825B20E086C1E00C5BD07203D
|
Resumo
ObjectiveThis article analyzes the relationship between educational aspirations and fertility aspirations early in the life course in three different settings.BackgroundThe negative relationship between women's educational attainment and childbearing is one of the most consistent associations in social science. Family scholars have a more limited understanding of the relationship between educational aspirations and fertility aspirations before childbearing or union formation.MethodThe authors use data collected in Jalisco, Mexico; Gaza, Mozambique; and Chitwan Valley, Nepal as part of the Family Migration and Early Life Outcomes project. They estimate nested Poisson regressions to model the relationship between adolescent educational aspirations and desired family size, controlling for individual‐ and household‐level sociodemographic variables as well as adolescent beliefs and values.ResultsOn average, adolescents who desire more education want fewer children in unadjusted models. In Mozambique and Nepal, this association is attenuated in models accounting for household characteristics. In Mexico, the association persists after incorporating these factors, but the inclusion of individual aspirations attenuates the relationship between educational aspirations and desired family size. In Mozambique, the association of educational aspirations with desired family size is moderated by gender.ConclusionAs young people enter adolescence, their desires for education and childbearing are inversely related, but the mechanisms driving this association vary across contexts. This variation may be related to linkages between education, social status, and family values.