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Overview Chapter 5: Determinants of family formation and childbearing during the societal transition in Central and Eastern Europe

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Tomas Frejka

 
VOLUME 19 - ARTICLE 7
PAGES 139 - 170
Date Received: 9 Apr 2007
Date Published: 1 Jul 2008

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol19/7/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2008.19.7
   
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Abstract

Societal conditions for early and high rates of childbearing were replaced by conditions generating late and low levels of fertility common in Western countries. Central among factors shaping the latter behaviour (job insecurity, unstable partnership relationships, expensive housing, and profound changes in norms, values and attitudes) were the following: increasing proportions of young people were acquiring advanced education, a majority of women were gainfully employed, yet women were performing most household maintenance and childrearing duties. Two theories prevailed to explain what caused changes in family formation and fertility trends. One argues that the economic and social crises were the principal causes. The other considered the diffusion of western norms, values and attitudes as the prime factors of change. Neither reveals the root cause: the replacement of state socialist regimes with economic and political institutions of contemporary capitalism. The extraordinarily low period TFRs around 2000 were the result of low fertility of older women born around 1960 overlapping with low fertility of young women born during the 1970s.

Author's affiliation
Tomas Frejka
Independent researcher, International

Keywords
Central Europe, childbearing, Eastern Europe, family, fertility

Related links
file You will find all publications in this Special Collection “Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe” at http://www.demographic-research.org/special/7/

Word count (Main text)
9388

Other articles by the same author/authors (in Demographic Research)
file[19-5] Overview Chapter 3: Birth regulation in Europe: Completing the contraceptive revolution
file[19-4] Overview Chapter 2: Parity distribution and completed family size in Europe: Incipient decline of the two-child family model
file[19-3] Overview Chapter 1: Fertility in Europe: Diverse, delayed and below replacement
file[19-2] Summary and general conclusions: Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe
file[16-11] Cohort birth order, parity progression ratio and parity distribution trends in developed countries
file[15-6] First birth trends in developed countries: Persisting parenthood postponement
file[5-5] Cohort Reproductive Patterns in the Nordic Countries

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