The 1991 census did not ask women how many children they had ever had. Because of this, there has been a gap in our understanding of fertility trends. The author uses the `own-children' method which allows him to fill this gap. He analyses the fertility of immigrant women in Australia and discovers that, by 1991, most had lower fertility than Australian-born women. Most also had lower fertility than women of a comparable age in their countries of origin. Second-generation `migrants' had converged even more closely to the Australian norm
The decline in fertility in Australia in the 1990s reflected both decreased first-order birth rates ...
One of the factors contributing to the decline in fertility in Australia is the fall in the proporti...
Australia has one of the largest percentages of immigrant populations in the developed world with a ...
The information which can be gathered from the 1991 Census on trends in fertility in limited. But an...
This article examines the fertility patterns of immigrant groups in Australia during the period, 197...
Examination of fertility rates in Australia indicates a fall over time in both period and cohort fer...
Rebecca Kippen is Research Fellow in the Demography and Sociology Program at the Research School of ...
The falling fertility rate in Australia, as in other developed countries, has been the focus of much...
The results of the 1996 Census show that levels of fertility are falling for almost all categories o...
The results of the 1996 Census show that levels of fertility are falling for almost all categories o...
Rebecca Kippen is Research Fellow in the Demography and Sociology Program at the Research School of ...
Paper to be presented at the IUSSP Seminar on ‘International Perspectives on Low Fertility: trends,...
From 2006 to 2016, fertility in Australia remained constant for women with high education while it f...
The fertility rate in Australia, like almost all OECD countries, is below the level required for pop...
This paper examines the change in the level and pattern of fertility that took place in the post-197...
The decline in fertility in Australia in the 1990s reflected both decreased first-order birth rates ...
One of the factors contributing to the decline in fertility in Australia is the fall in the proporti...
Australia has one of the largest percentages of immigrant populations in the developed world with a ...
The information which can be gathered from the 1991 Census on trends in fertility in limited. But an...
This article examines the fertility patterns of immigrant groups in Australia during the period, 197...
Examination of fertility rates in Australia indicates a fall over time in both period and cohort fer...
Rebecca Kippen is Research Fellow in the Demography and Sociology Program at the Research School of ...
The falling fertility rate in Australia, as in other developed countries, has been the focus of much...
The results of the 1996 Census show that levels of fertility are falling for almost all categories o...
The results of the 1996 Census show that levels of fertility are falling for almost all categories o...
Rebecca Kippen is Research Fellow in the Demography and Sociology Program at the Research School of ...
Paper to be presented at the IUSSP Seminar on ‘International Perspectives on Low Fertility: trends,...
From 2006 to 2016, fertility in Australia remained constant for women with high education while it f...
The fertility rate in Australia, like almost all OECD countries, is below the level required for pop...
This paper examines the change in the level and pattern of fertility that took place in the post-197...
The decline in fertility in Australia in the 1990s reflected both decreased first-order birth rates ...
One of the factors contributing to the decline in fertility in Australia is the fall in the proporti...
Australia has one of the largest percentages of immigrant populations in the developed world with a ...