This article retraces the history of fertility theories as illustrated by 23 founding texts grouped together in a single volume (Leridon, 2014, Les théories de la fécondité, INED). Until recent times, no reliable statistics were available for the analysis of fertility behaviours, which were treated rather as a question of philosophy, morals, political science or religion. It was not until the birth of the social sciences in the nineteenth century that the first real theories of fertility started to emerge. At that time, the demographic transition in Europe and the accompanying social and economic transformations gave rise to new demographic behaviours for which a theoretical framework was needed. Many new disciplines were brought into play,...
Cultural evolutionists have long been interested in the problem of why fertility declines as populat...
In the 50th anniversary edition of Population Studies, John Hobcraft commented that demographers spe...
Demographic theorists have difficulty accounting for why women in late modern developed societies co...
<b>Background</b>: A theoretical approach to explaining fertility behavior in developed countries ne...
Abstract: Fertility, as a component of population change, caught the attention of many demographers...
This paper provides a review of fertility research in advanced societies, societies in which birth c...
The article provides a brief overview of the most important theoretical approaches to explain fertil...
The approaches used by demographers and by epidemiologists for studying the fecundity of couples (i....
In this special issue, a pluridisciplinary group of scholars discuss the complex interrelationship a...
In the 50th anniversary edition of Population Studies, John Hobcraft commented that demographers spe...
Over the last sixty years, descriptive and causal approaches have analyzed fertility trends from man...
"This article investigates the complicated and intertwined history between the scientific discipline...
Demographic changes are one of the indicators of sustainable development, expressed by the value of ...
Decades of research on human fertility has presented a clear picture of how fertility varies, includ...
The study of fertility is one of the few subject matters common to all disciplines in the social sci...
Cultural evolutionists have long been interested in the problem of why fertility declines as populat...
In the 50th anniversary edition of Population Studies, John Hobcraft commented that demographers spe...
Demographic theorists have difficulty accounting for why women in late modern developed societies co...
<b>Background</b>: A theoretical approach to explaining fertility behavior in developed countries ne...
Abstract: Fertility, as a component of population change, caught the attention of many demographers...
This paper provides a review of fertility research in advanced societies, societies in which birth c...
The article provides a brief overview of the most important theoretical approaches to explain fertil...
The approaches used by demographers and by epidemiologists for studying the fecundity of couples (i....
In this special issue, a pluridisciplinary group of scholars discuss the complex interrelationship a...
In the 50th anniversary edition of Population Studies, John Hobcraft commented that demographers spe...
Over the last sixty years, descriptive and causal approaches have analyzed fertility trends from man...
"This article investigates the complicated and intertwined history between the scientific discipline...
Demographic changes are one of the indicators of sustainable development, expressed by the value of ...
Decades of research on human fertility has presented a clear picture of how fertility varies, includ...
The study of fertility is one of the few subject matters common to all disciplines in the social sci...
Cultural evolutionists have long been interested in the problem of why fertility declines as populat...
In the 50th anniversary edition of Population Studies, John Hobcraft commented that demographers spe...
Demographic theorists have difficulty accounting for why women in late modern developed societies co...