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Sibship size and status attainment across contexts: Evidence from the Netherlands, 1840-1925

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Hilde Bras
Jan Kok
Kees Mandemakers

 
VOLUME 23 - ARTICLE 4
PAGES 73 - 104
Date Received: 27 Aug 2009
Date Published: 13 Jul 2010

http://www.demographic-research.org/volumes/vol23/4/

doi:10.4054/DemRes.2010.23.4
   
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Abstract

This paper investigates the effects of sibship size on status attainment across different contexts and subgroups. Resource dilution theory predicts that with larger sibship size, children’s status outcomes fall. However, the empirical record has shown that this is not always the case. In this paper we have tested three alternative hypotheses for neutral or even positive effects of sibship size on status attainment on the basis of a large-scale registry database covering the period of industrialization and fertility decline in the Netherlands in the nineteenth and early twentieth-century. Our findings offer support for the family developmental cycle, buffering by kin groups, and socio-economic development as alternative explanations to the resource dilution hypothesis.

Author's affiliation
Hilde Bras
VU University Amsterdam, Netherlands
Jan Kok
Virtual Knowledge Studio for the Humanities and Social Sciences (VKS), Netherlands
Kees Mandemakers
International Institute for Social History, Netherlands

Keywords
child well-being, family size, Netherlands, nineteenth century, resource dilution theory, sibship size, status attainment

Word count (Main text)
7957

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