Class and education differentials in levels of fertility are longstanding. In recent decades, class and education differentials in the timing of fertility have widened, with higher status women increasing age at first birth much more than lower status women. In this paper, we examine three potential factors explaining socioeconomic differences in fertility: 1) the value women place on children; 2) opportunity costs; and 3) contraceptive efficacy. Using data from over twenty years of the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY), we describe patterns of planned and unplanned childbearing among women from different class backgrounds and with varying levels of own education. We use competing hazard models to examine the role of socioec...
Background: Unlike actual fertility, fertility intentions are often found to be positively correlate...
There are marked socioeconomic variations in the risk of female reproductive cancers. We examine her...
Fertility has been declining almost continuously in both developing and developed economies over the...
Using a hazards framework and panel data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (1979-2004),...
Using a hazards framework and panel data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (1979-2004)...
We present evidence that the cross-sectional relationship between fertility and women’s education in...
There is striking social variation in the timing of the onset of childbearing in contemporary Englan...
There are marked socioeconomic variations in the risk of female reproductive cancers. We examine her...
Despite a long tradition of studying the relationship between education and fertility outcomes less ...
Despite a long tradition of studying the relationship between education and fertility outcomes less ...
AbstractDespite a long tradition of studying the relationship between education and fertility outcom...
This study uses the High School and Beyond data (1980–1992) to examine the importance of educational...
Seeking to understand what catalyzes and sustains fertility reduction, this research explores the re...
This study uses the High School and Beyond data (1980–1992) to examine the importance of educational...
<b>Background</b>: Recent research on fertility in industrialized countries focuses primarily on del...
Background: Unlike actual fertility, fertility intentions are often found to be positively correlate...
There are marked socioeconomic variations in the risk of female reproductive cancers. We examine her...
Fertility has been declining almost continuously in both developing and developed economies over the...
Using a hazards framework and panel data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (1979-2004),...
Using a hazards framework and panel data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (1979-2004)...
We present evidence that the cross-sectional relationship between fertility and women’s education in...
There is striking social variation in the timing of the onset of childbearing in contemporary Englan...
There are marked socioeconomic variations in the risk of female reproductive cancers. We examine her...
Despite a long tradition of studying the relationship between education and fertility outcomes less ...
Despite a long tradition of studying the relationship between education and fertility outcomes less ...
AbstractDespite a long tradition of studying the relationship between education and fertility outcom...
This study uses the High School and Beyond data (1980–1992) to examine the importance of educational...
Seeking to understand what catalyzes and sustains fertility reduction, this research explores the re...
This study uses the High School and Beyond data (1980–1992) to examine the importance of educational...
<b>Background</b>: Recent research on fertility in industrialized countries focuses primarily on del...
Background: Unlike actual fertility, fertility intentions are often found to be positively correlate...
There are marked socioeconomic variations in the risk of female reproductive cancers. We examine her...
Fertility has been declining almost continuously in both developing and developed economies over the...