Twenty-seven voluntarily childless couples who had made early decisions prior to marriage not to have children were compared to 23 couples childless through a series of successive postponements of child-bearing. While the two groups differed little on background characteristics, husbands in early deciding relationships were less feminine-oriented and their wives more masculine-oriented than husbands and wives in the postponing group. Early deciding couples revealed higher levels of commitment to their choice, especially being more likely to seek an abortion for any pregnancy or to adopt out any child. A repertory grid measure revealed few differences in perceptions of others by either group of deliberately childless couples
The problem of involuntary childlessness and its effect on marital happiness has been studied in an ...
It is widely agreed that society has strong mores proscribing couples remaining childless. Nonethele...
Infertility and fertility treatment have the potential to impact and disrupt a couple’s overall life...
Few comparisons have been made between adults who make early, explicit decisions not to have childre...
The public perception is that marriages without children are less happy and less satisfactory. To pu...
It was the intent of this research to: (1) determine from voluntarily childless couples (C-) their r...
Forty-two single women who want to be childless, eighteen who desire a one child family, and 42 who ...
In this article data from the British Household Panel Study (BHPS) are used to analyse gender differ...
Family scholars studying voluntary childlessness have increasingly focused on how to define the empi...
This paper shows the results of author’s study carried out in Wielkopolska region in 1999 among 140...
We investigate the decision-making process of having a first child, using theories on individualisat...
This paper starts by reviewing existing projections of childlessness among British men and women. Lo...
This study compared voluntarily childless couples to voluntary parents on the variables of marital s...
Much of the literature on childbearing motivations has recognised conformity to fertility norms, esp...
We investigate the decision-making process of having a first child, using theories on individualisat...
The problem of involuntary childlessness and its effect on marital happiness has been studied in an ...
It is widely agreed that society has strong mores proscribing couples remaining childless. Nonethele...
Infertility and fertility treatment have the potential to impact and disrupt a couple’s overall life...
Few comparisons have been made between adults who make early, explicit decisions not to have childre...
The public perception is that marriages without children are less happy and less satisfactory. To pu...
It was the intent of this research to: (1) determine from voluntarily childless couples (C-) their r...
Forty-two single women who want to be childless, eighteen who desire a one child family, and 42 who ...
In this article data from the British Household Panel Study (BHPS) are used to analyse gender differ...
Family scholars studying voluntary childlessness have increasingly focused on how to define the empi...
This paper shows the results of author’s study carried out in Wielkopolska region in 1999 among 140...
We investigate the decision-making process of having a first child, using theories on individualisat...
This paper starts by reviewing existing projections of childlessness among British men and women. Lo...
This study compared voluntarily childless couples to voluntary parents on the variables of marital s...
Much of the literature on childbearing motivations has recognised conformity to fertility norms, esp...
We investigate the decision-making process of having a first child, using theories on individualisat...
The problem of involuntary childlessness and its effect on marital happiness has been studied in an ...
It is widely agreed that society has strong mores proscribing couples remaining childless. Nonethele...
Infertility and fertility treatment have the potential to impact and disrupt a couple’s overall life...