Social Meaning of Children and Fertility Change in Europe

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An-Magritt Jensen
Anne Lise Ellingsaeter
Category=JBSA
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Category=JHM
Childcare Facilities
Childless Men
Childless Participants
Childless Women
commitment
Completed Cohort Fertility
Dual Earner Family Model
economic risk
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family
Family Formation Patterns
Family Policies
family policy analysis
fatherhood
Fertility Behaviour
Fertility Change
Fertility Choice
Fertility Decisions
Fertility Levels
fertility patterns
flexible work
French Family Policy
gender and class
gender and class differences
Gender Equality
Higher University Degree
institutions
intergenerational fertility norms
labour market impact
Larger Family
Merete Lie
mothers and daughters
National Fertility Levels
Norwegian Young Adults
parenthood
partnership
paternity leave
personal relations
politics of parenting
Post-secondary Education
qualitative data
qualitative fertility research
reproductive decision-making
The Social Meaning of Children and Fertility Change in Europe
welfare state
West Germany
Women's Labour Market Participation
Women’s Labour Market Participation
Work Family Policies
young adult reproductive choices Europe
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415810913
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 25 Feb 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Low fertility in Europe has given rise to the notion of a ‘fertility crisis’. This book shifts the attention from fertility decline to why people do have children, asking what children mean to them. It investigates what role children play in how young adults plan their lives, and why and how young adults make the choices they do.

The book aims to expand our comprehension of the complex structures and cultures that influence reproductive choice, and explores three key aspects of fertility choices:

  • the processes towards having (or not having) children, and how they are underpinned by negotiations and ambivalences
  • how family policies, labour markets and personal relations interact in young adults’ fertility choices
  • social differentiation in fertility choice: how fertility rationales and reasoning may differ among women and men, and across social classes

Based on empirical studies from six nations – France, Scandinavia, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Germany and Italy (representing the high and low end of European variation in fertility rates) – the book shows how different economic, political and cultural contexts interact in young adults' fertility rationales. It will be of interest to students and scholars of sociology, anthropology, demography and gender studies.

Anne Lise Ellingsæter is Professor of Sociology at the University of Oslo.

An-Magritt Jensen is Professor of Sociology at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology.

Merete Lie is Professor in the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture at Norwegian University of Science and Technology.