Especially in developing countries, overpopulation has become a social and economic problem. This paper will examine the cultural and economic components that drive people in developing countries to reproduce more than what might be financially viable for them, and how this situation might be addressed. Research suggests that, socially, there are two main reasons that impoverished families have large numbers of children. The first is because there is a societal expectation that many children will die in infancy, even though medical advances have greatly decreased the infant mortality rate in recent years. Second, parents view children as potential safeguards against being abandoned in their senior years. Interestingly, in this instance, pov...
Vietnam has some of the highest land densities in the world, and its population is still growing. Th...
Beyond natural sterility, there are two main types of childlessness: one driven by poverty and anoth...
Author Institution: Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OhioSmal...
This paper develops a theory of fertility that offers an explanation for the persistence of poverty ...
The present article examines the need for family policy, acknowledging its potentially invasive natu...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Fifty years ago, women in Asi...
There is a very large but scattered literature debating the economic implications of high fertility....
Rapid population growth is often cited as an important correlate of high poverty rates in lowincome ...
People’s Republic of China is not only the fastest growing economy in the world, but with the larges...
This chapter examines low fertility and government responses in East Asia and other industrialized r...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to focus on the issue and the reasons why fertility patterns i...
China's One Child Policy (OCP), introduced in 1979, changed fundamentally the nature of both existin...
China’s One Child Policy (OCP), introduced in 1979, changed fundamentally the nature of both existin...
This dissertation consists of three essays investigating how public policies affect parental decisio...
Education has been identified as one of the main transmission mechanisms of intergenerational mobili...
Vietnam has some of the highest land densities in the world, and its population is still growing. Th...
Beyond natural sterility, there are two main types of childlessness: one driven by poverty and anoth...
Author Institution: Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OhioSmal...
This paper develops a theory of fertility that offers an explanation for the persistence of poverty ...
The present article examines the need for family policy, acknowledging its potentially invasive natu...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Fifty years ago, women in Asi...
There is a very large but scattered literature debating the economic implications of high fertility....
Rapid population growth is often cited as an important correlate of high poverty rates in lowincome ...
People’s Republic of China is not only the fastest growing economy in the world, but with the larges...
This chapter examines low fertility and government responses in East Asia and other industrialized r...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to focus on the issue and the reasons why fertility patterns i...
China's One Child Policy (OCP), introduced in 1979, changed fundamentally the nature of both existin...
China’s One Child Policy (OCP), introduced in 1979, changed fundamentally the nature of both existin...
This dissertation consists of three essays investigating how public policies affect parental decisio...
Education has been identified as one of the main transmission mechanisms of intergenerational mobili...
Vietnam has some of the highest land densities in the world, and its population is still growing. Th...
Beyond natural sterility, there are two main types of childlessness: one driven by poverty and anoth...
Author Institution: Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OhioSmal...