To better understand the gap between women’s childbearing aspirations and actual levels of childbearing, this paper investigates the importance of employment, relationship and motherhood transitions for predicting women’s desired number of children. Women born in 1973–78 participating in the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health were asked, at three-time points over six years, how many children they would like to have by the age of 35 years. Women who delayed childbearing, did not marry or enter a cohabiting relationship aspired to fewer children, whilst those who married aspired to more children. Notably, the two-way interactions demonstrated that for women without children, and for women who had had their first child between wav...
In Australia and other affluent societies people tend to report a number of desired children which i...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
The study contributes to the understandings of how women negotiate work and family over the life cou...
The study contributes to the understandings of how women negotiate work and family over the life cou...
The study contributes to the understandings of how women negotiate work and family over the life cou...
There is little known about the extent to which Australian women leave work on commencement of child...
Falling birth rates and an increase of women, especially mothers, in the paid workforce have elicite...
Do the demands of high-status professions explain childlessness among some women? Robert Tanton desc...
Fertility rates in the developed world have been below replacement level for 25 years, and it is oft...
The decline in fertility in Australia in the 1990s reflected both decreased first-order birth rates ...
Although there are well-established relationships between women's higher education, labour force par...
Although there are well-established relationships between women’s higher education, labour fo...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyse how and whether young women’s strong and early pref...
This paper studies the quantitative effects of changes in fertility patterns and rel-ative wages, on...
In Australia and other affluent societies people tend to report a number of desired children which i...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
The study contributes to the understandings of how women negotiate work and family over the life cou...
The study contributes to the understandings of how women negotiate work and family over the life cou...
The study contributes to the understandings of how women negotiate work and family over the life cou...
There is little known about the extent to which Australian women leave work on commencement of child...
Falling birth rates and an increase of women, especially mothers, in the paid workforce have elicite...
Do the demands of high-status professions explain childlessness among some women? Robert Tanton desc...
Fertility rates in the developed world have been below replacement level for 25 years, and it is oft...
The decline in fertility in Australia in the 1990s reflected both decreased first-order birth rates ...
Although there are well-established relationships between women's higher education, labour force par...
Although there are well-established relationships between women’s higher education, labour fo...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyse how and whether young women’s strong and early pref...
This paper studies the quantitative effects of changes in fertility patterns and rel-ative wages, on...
In Australia and other affluent societies people tend to report a number of desired children which i...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...
Women in contemporary western economies have more options and more pressures to combine work with fa...