<b>Background</b>: Recent stalls in fertility decline have been observed in a few countries in sub-Saharan Africa, and so far no plausible common reason has been identified in the literature. This paper develops the hypothesis that these fertility stalls could be associated with stalls in the progress of education among the women of the relevant cohorts, possibly resulting partly from the Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) of the 1980s. <b>Methods</b>: We descriptively link the change in the education composition of successive cohorts of young women in sub-Saharan Africa and the recent fertility stalls. We use reconstructed data on population by age, gender, and level of education from www.wittgenstein centre.org/dataexplorer, and fer...
This article examines the relationship between female schooling and two behav-iors—cumulative fertil...
Stalls in fertility decline were first identified in Ghana and Kenya in the early 2000s, and since t...
A common explanation for the high fertility prevailing in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is a widespread d...
Population projections for sub-Saharan Africa have, over the past decade, been corrected upwards bec...
Population projections for sub-Saharan Africa have, over the past decade, been corrected upwards be...
Countries in Sub-African countries that are classified as having experienced stalled fertility decli...
Sub-Saharan Africa was the last major part of the developing world to experiencefertility decline, a...
Fertility transition in sub-Saharan Africa has been different than in other low- and middle-income c...
Background: The gap between fertility outcomes and fertility ideals is notably higher in sub-Saharan...
This paper uses data from the Demographic and Health Surveys to examine the current status of fertil...
Caldwell has hypothesized that the onset of the fertility transition would be linked with the achiev...
This study first presents an analytic framework that describes the chain of causation linking fertil...
This paper uses data from the Demographic and Health Surveys to examine the current status of fertil...
Sub-Saharan Africa has experienced an expansion of schooling, accompanied by delays in marriage and ...
This study first presents an analytic framework that describes the chain of causation linking fertil...
This article examines the relationship between female schooling and two behav-iors—cumulative fertil...
Stalls in fertility decline were first identified in Ghana and Kenya in the early 2000s, and since t...
A common explanation for the high fertility prevailing in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is a widespread d...
Population projections for sub-Saharan Africa have, over the past decade, been corrected upwards bec...
Population projections for sub-Saharan Africa have, over the past decade, been corrected upwards be...
Countries in Sub-African countries that are classified as having experienced stalled fertility decli...
Sub-Saharan Africa was the last major part of the developing world to experiencefertility decline, a...
Fertility transition in sub-Saharan Africa has been different than in other low- and middle-income c...
Background: The gap between fertility outcomes and fertility ideals is notably higher in sub-Saharan...
This paper uses data from the Demographic and Health Surveys to examine the current status of fertil...
Caldwell has hypothesized that the onset of the fertility transition would be linked with the achiev...
This study first presents an analytic framework that describes the chain of causation linking fertil...
This paper uses data from the Demographic and Health Surveys to examine the current status of fertil...
Sub-Saharan Africa has experienced an expansion of schooling, accompanied by delays in marriage and ...
This study first presents an analytic framework that describes the chain of causation linking fertil...
This article examines the relationship between female schooling and two behav-iors—cumulative fertil...
Stalls in fertility decline were first identified in Ghana and Kenya in the early 2000s, and since t...
A common explanation for the high fertility prevailing in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is a widespread d...