Volume 17 - Article 25 | Pages 741–774  

Migration and first-time parenthood: Evidence from Kyrgyzstan

By Lesia Nedoluzhko, Gunnar Andersson

References

Agadjanian, V. (1999). Post-Soviet demographic paradoxes: Ethnic differences in marriage and fertility in Kazakhstan. Sociological Forum 14(3): 425-446.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Agadjanian, V. and Qian, Z.C. (1997). Ethnocultural identity and induced abortion in Kazakstan. Studies in Family Planning 28(4): 317−329.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Andersson, G. (2004). Childbearing after migration: fertility patterns of foreign-born women in Sweden. International Migration Review 38(2): 747-774.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Andersson, G. (2000). The impact of labour-force participation on childbearing behaviour: pro-cyclical fertility in Sweden during the 1980s and the 1990s. European Journal of Population 16(4): 293-333.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Andersson, G. and Scott, K. (2005). Labour-market status and first-time parenthood: the experience of immigrant women in Sweden, 1981-97. Population Studies 59(1): 21-38.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Baizan, P., Aassve, A., and Billari, F. (2004). The interrelations between cohabitation, marriage and first birth in Germany and Sweden. Population and Environment 25(6): 531−561.

Download reference:

Becker, C., Musabek, E., Seitenova, A., and Urzhumova, D. (2003). Short-term migration responses of women and men during economic turmoil: lessons from Kazakhstan. Eurasian Geography and Economics 44(3): 228−243.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Becker, G. (1981). A Treatise on the Family. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Download reference:

Bernhardt, E. (1993). Fertility and employment. European Sociological Review 9(1): 25-42.

Download reference:

Bondarskaya, G. (1978). Fertility in the USSR (Ethno-Demographic Aspect). Moscow: Statistica (in Russian).

Download reference:

Chattopadhyay, A., White, M., and Debpuur, C. (2006). Migrant fertility in Ghana: selection versus adaptation and disruption as causal mechanisms. Population Studies 60(2): 189-203.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Demakov, G. (1997). Population migration and its social consequences in Kazakhstan. Tsentralnaya Azia 4: 28-37 (in Russian).

Download reference:

Denisenko, M. (2004). Fertility in Kyrgyzstan. In: Kudabaev, Z., Guillot, M., and Denisenko, M. (eds.). Population of Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic (in Russian): 206-241.

Download reference:

Edwards, M. (2002). Education and occupations: reexamining the conventional wisdom about later first births among American mothers. Sociological Forum 17(3): 423-443.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Falkingham, J. (2005). The end of the rollercoaster? Growth, inequality and poverty in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Social Policy and Administration 39(3): 340-360.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Farber, S. and Lee, B. (1984). Fertility adaptation of rural-to-urban migrant women: a method of estimation applied to Korean women. Demography 21(3): 339-345.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Finnäs, F. (1997). Social integration, heterogeneity and divorce. The case of the Swedish-speaking population in Finland. Acta Sociologica 40: 263-277.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Fletcher, J. and Sergeyev, B. (2002). Islam and intolerance in Central Asia: the case of Kyrgyzstan. Europe-Asia Studies 54(2): 251-275.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Goldstein, S. and Goldstein, A. (1984). Inter-relations between migration and fertility - their significance for urbanization in Malaysia. Habitat International 8(1): 93-103.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Hervitz, H. (1985). Selectivity, adaptation or disruption? A comparison of alternative hypotheses on the effects of migration on fertility: the case of Brazil. International Migration Review 19(2): 293-317.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Hiday, V. (1978). Migration, urbanization, and fertility in Philippines. International Migration Review 12(3): 370-385.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Hoem, B. (1993). The compatibility of employment and childbearing in contemporary Sweden. Acta Sociologica 36(2): 101-120.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Hoem, B. and Hoem, J. (1989). The impact of women’s employment on second and third births in modern Sweden. Population Studies 43: 47-67.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Jones, S. and Grupp, F. (1987). Modernization, Values Changes and Fertility in the Soviet Union. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Download reference:

Kleinbach, R., Ablezova, M., and Aitieva, M. (2005). Kidnapping for marriage ala kachuu in a Kyrgyz village. Central Asian Survey 24(2): 191-202.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Kudabaev, Z., Guillot, M., and Denisenko, M. (eds.) (2004). Population of Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: The National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic (in Russian).

Download reference:

Kulu, H. (2006). Fertility of internal migrants: comparison between Austria and Poland. Population, Space and Place 12(3): 147-170.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Kulu, H. (2005). Migration and fertility: competing hypotheses re-examined. European Journal of Population 21(1): 51−87.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Kulu, H. and Vikat, A. (2007). Fertility differences by housing type: The effect of housing conditions or of selective moves? Demographic Research 17(26): 775−802.

Kulu, H., Vikat, A., and Andersson, G. (2007). Settlement size and fertility in the Nordic countries. Population Studies 61(3): 265-285.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Kumskov, G. (2002). Patterns and Peculiarities of Contemporary Migration Processes in Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University (in Russian).

Download reference:

Kumskova, N. (1983). Mechanisms of Population Mobility in Kirgizia. Frunze, Kyrgyzstan (in Russian).

Download reference:

Kumskova, N., Kumskov, G., and Ploskich, E. (2004). Contemporary Problems of Internal Migration in Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: UNFPA in Kyrgyzstan (in Russian).

Download reference:

Lindstrom, D. and Giorguli Saucedo, S. (2007). The interrelationship of fertility, family maintenance, and Mexico-U.S. migration. Demographic Research 17(28): 821-858.

Lindstrom, D. and Giorguli Saucedo, S. (2002). The short- and long-term effects of US migration experience on Mexican women's fertility. Social Forces 80(4): 1341−1368.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Macisco, J., Bouvier, L., and Weller, R. (1970). The effect of labor force participation on the relation between migration status and fertility in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly 48: 51-70.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Milewski, N. (2007). First child of immigrant workers and their descendants in West Germany: Interrelation of events, disruption, or adaptation? Demographic Research 17(29): 859-896.

Nedoluzhko, L. (2000). Causes, peculiarities and consequences of migration processes in the Kyrgyz Republic during the transition period. Cairo: Cairo Demographic Center (Population and Development Research Monograph Series No. 7).

Download reference:

Nedoluzhko, L. (2003). Socio-economic reasons for fertility reduction. Vestnic 2(4): 24-30 (Bishkek: Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University; in Russian).

Download reference:

NSC of the Kyrgyz Republic (2006). Men and Women of the Kyrgyz Republic. Bishkek: National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic.

Download reference:

Perelli-Harris, B. (2005). The path to lowest-low fertility in Ukraine. Population Studies 59(1): 55-70.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Ryspaev, S. (1972). Fertility in Kirgizia and its perspectives, in Regional Peculiarities of the USSR’s Population Reproduction. Cheboksary: Ministry of Higher and Secondary Special Education of the RSFSR (in Russian).

Download reference:

Sarygulov, B. (2001). The Current Demographic Situation in Kyrgyzstan and Alternatives to its Development. Bishkek: UNFPA in Kyrgyzstan (in Russian).

Download reference:

Shuler, M. and Kudabaev, Z. (2004). Migration in Kyrgyzstan. In: Kudabaev, Z., Guillot, M., and Denisenko, M. (eds.). The Population of Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic (in Russian): 281-303.

Download reference:

Sifman, R. (1974). Fertility Dynamics in the USSR. Moscow: Statistica (in Russian).

Download reference:

Singley, S. and Landale, L. (1998). Incorporating origin and process in migration-fertility frameworks: the case of Puerto Rican Women. Social Forces 76(4): 1437-1464.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Stephen, E. and Bean, F. (1992). Assimilation, disruption and the fertility of Mexican-origin women in the United-States. International Migration Review 26(1): 67-88.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Subbotina, I.A. (1997). Russians in Kazakhstan: The migration situation on the eve and after the breakup of the USSR. In: Savoskul, S.S. (ed.). Russians in the New Abroad: Migration Situation, Relocation, and Adaptation in Russia. Moscow: Institute of Ethnology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (in Russian): 154-175.

Download reference:

Tishkov, V.A. (1994). Russians in Central Asia. In: Kozlov, V.I. and Shervoud, E.A. (eds.). Russians in the Near Abroad. Moscow: Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (in Russian): 140-149.

Download reference:

Toulemon, L. and Mazuy, M. (2004). Comment prendre en compte l’âge à l’arrivée et la durée de séjour en France dans la mesure de la fécondité des immigrants? Paris: Institut national d’études démographiques (Documents de travail 120, 2004).

Download reference:

Wetherell, C. and Plakans, A. (1997). Fertility and culture in Eastern Europe: a case study of Riga, Latvia, 1867−1881. European Journal of Population 13: 243-268.

Weblink:
Download reference:

World Bank (2006). Country profiles. Kyrgyzstan.

Weblink:
Download reference:

Yavuz, S. (2006). Completing the fertility transition: third birth developments by language groups in Turkey. Demographic Research 15(15): 435-460.

Back to the article