This article investigates the reproductive behavior of young women and men in the post-Soviet Central Asian republic of Kyrgyzstan, focusing on the link between migration and fertility. We employ event-history techniques to retrospective data from the ‘Marriage, Fertility, and Migration’ survey conducted in Northern Kyrgyzstan in 2005 to study patterns in first-time parenthood. We demonstrate the extent to which internal migration is related to family formation and to the patterns of becoming a parent after resettlement. We gain deeper insights into demographic behavior by considering information on factors such as the geographical destination of migration and retrospectively stated motives for reported moves. In addition, our study reveals...
Until the early 1990s, the common characteristics of Russian fertility were early and almost univers...
In this article we investigate fertility intentions of Russian women in Estonia from an origin-desti...
This thesis, structured into four separate but related papers, uses survey birth history data to exa...
This article investigates the reproductive behavior of young women and men in the post-Soviet Centra...
In our study we investigate interdependencies between entry into a marital union, childbearing, and ...
This thesis contributes to the limited demographic literature on Central Asia – the region through w...
We analyse the socio-economic and cultural factors that influence the timing of the first birth in K...
In this study, we investigate interdependences between entry into a marital union, childbearing, and...
Kyrgyzstan has undergone great societal change since gaining independence from the USSR in 1991. Whi...
In studies of differences in fertility between migrants and non-migrants, marriage interferes becaus...
Declining marriage and fertility rates following the collapse of state socialism have been the subje...
This dissertation investigates the decline to very low fertility in societies undergoing rapid socia...
This dissertation studies patterns in childbearing and reproductive behaviour in Kazakhstan, a conte...
BACKGROUND In post-Soviet countries, low fertility has been achieved through postponement of second ...
This dissertation focuses on the fertility and family behaviour of women who have migrated between e...
Until the early 1990s, the common characteristics of Russian fertility were early and almost univers...
In this article we investigate fertility intentions of Russian women in Estonia from an origin-desti...
This thesis, structured into four separate but related papers, uses survey birth history data to exa...
This article investigates the reproductive behavior of young women and men in the post-Soviet Centra...
In our study we investigate interdependencies between entry into a marital union, childbearing, and ...
This thesis contributes to the limited demographic literature on Central Asia – the region through w...
We analyse the socio-economic and cultural factors that influence the timing of the first birth in K...
In this study, we investigate interdependences between entry into a marital union, childbearing, and...
Kyrgyzstan has undergone great societal change since gaining independence from the USSR in 1991. Whi...
In studies of differences in fertility between migrants and non-migrants, marriage interferes becaus...
Declining marriage and fertility rates following the collapse of state socialism have been the subje...
This dissertation investigates the decline to very low fertility in societies undergoing rapid socia...
This dissertation studies patterns in childbearing and reproductive behaviour in Kazakhstan, a conte...
BACKGROUND In post-Soviet countries, low fertility has been achieved through postponement of second ...
This dissertation focuses on the fertility and family behaviour of women who have migrated between e...
Until the early 1990s, the common characteristics of Russian fertility were early and almost univers...
In this article we investigate fertility intentions of Russian women in Estonia from an origin-desti...
This thesis, structured into four separate but related papers, uses survey birth history data to exa...