Using South African Families (SAF), a new database of settler genealogies, we provide the first comprehensive analysis of women’s cohort fertility in settler South Africa between 1700 and 1900. We find parity rates of approximately seven children per woman until a decline begins starting with women born in the 1850s. We date the start of South Africa’s fertility transition to cohorts born in the 1850s, having children from the 1870s. Both average parity and the timing of the transition are similar to other settler societies suggesting that although the sample suffers from selection it does not bias the parity estimates
MSoc Sci (Population and Sustainable Development), North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2019Backg...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
The study uses data from eight censuses conducted between 1970 and 2011 to reconstruct long term tre...
Using South African Families (SAF), a new database of settler genealogies, we provide the first comp...
Economic incentives affect demographic outcomes. That is to say, fertility, mortality, migration an...
Fecundity determines the magnitude and direction of evolutionary change. By analyzing traits correl...
Very little is known about what family life looked like for settlers in colonial South Africa during...
Inadequate data and apartheid policies have meant that, until recently, most demographers have not h...
We revisit the discussion on family limitation through stopping and spacing behavior prior to and du...
We derive a method for interpreting information about the reproductive performance of mothers of a s...
The study presents an analysis of long-term trends in terminal celibacy and primary infertility in S...
Using longitudinal data from the Agincourt Health and socio-Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) i...
The Cape Colony at the southernmost tip of Africa, founded in 1652 with the arrival of European sai...
Differential fertility can be attributed to economic and cultural factors, but the family also plays...
This paper examines the history of the level and trend of fertility in South Africa in a comparative...
MSoc Sci (Population and Sustainable Development), North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2019Backg...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
The study uses data from eight censuses conducted between 1970 and 2011 to reconstruct long term tre...
Using South African Families (SAF), a new database of settler genealogies, we provide the first comp...
Economic incentives affect demographic outcomes. That is to say, fertility, mortality, migration an...
Fecundity determines the magnitude and direction of evolutionary change. By analyzing traits correl...
Very little is known about what family life looked like for settlers in colonial South Africa during...
Inadequate data and apartheid policies have meant that, until recently, most demographers have not h...
We revisit the discussion on family limitation through stopping and spacing behavior prior to and du...
We derive a method for interpreting information about the reproductive performance of mothers of a s...
The study presents an analysis of long-term trends in terminal celibacy and primary infertility in S...
Using longitudinal data from the Agincourt Health and socio-Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS) i...
The Cape Colony at the southernmost tip of Africa, founded in 1652 with the arrival of European sai...
Differential fertility can be attributed to economic and cultural factors, but the family also plays...
This paper examines the history of the level and trend of fertility in South Africa in a comparative...
MSoc Sci (Population and Sustainable Development), North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2019Backg...
The paper examines the fall of marital fertility in Tasmania, the second settled Australian colony, ...
The study uses data from eight censuses conducted between 1970 and 2011 to reconstruct long term tre...