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.
Agadjanian, V. and Qian, Z.C. (1997). Ethnocultural identity and induced abortion in Kazakstan. Studies in Family Planning 28(4): 317−329.
Andersson, G. (2004). Childbearing after migration: fertility patterns of foreign-born women in Sweden. International Migration Review 38(2): 747-774.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Becker, G. (1981). A Treatise on the Family. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Bernhardt, E. (1993). Fertility and employment. European Sociological Review 9(1): 25-42.
Bondarskaya, G. (1978). Fertility in the USSR (Ethno-Demographic Aspect). Moscow: Statistica (in Russian).
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.
Demakov, G. (1997). Population migration and its social consequences in Kazakhstan. Tsentralnaya Azia 4: 28-37 (in Russian).
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.
Edwards, M. (2002). Education and occupations: reexamining the conventional wisdom about later first births among American mothers. Sociological Forum 17(3): 423-443.
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.
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.
Finnäs, F. (1997). Social integration, heterogeneity and divorce. The case of the Swedish-speaking population in Finland. Acta Sociologica 40: 263-277.
Fletcher, J. and Sergeyev, B. (2002). Islam and intolerance in Central Asia: the case of Kyrgyzstan. Europe-Asia Studies 54(2): 251-275.
Goldstein, S. and Goldstein, A. (1984). Inter-relations between migration and fertility - their significance for urbanization in Malaysia. Habitat International 8(1): 93-103.
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.
Hiday, V. (1978). Migration, urbanization, and fertility in Philippines. International Migration Review 12(3): 370-385.
Hoem, B. (1993). The compatibility of employment and childbearing in contemporary Sweden. Acta Sociologica 36(2): 101-120.
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.
Jones, S. and Grupp, F. (1987). Modernization, Values Changes and Fertility in the Soviet Union. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kleinbach, R., Ablezova, M., and Aitieva, M. (2005). Kidnapping for marriage ala kachuu in a Kyrgyz village. Central Asian Survey 24(2): 191-202.
Kudabaev, Z., Guillot, M., and Denisenko, M. (eds.) (2004). Population of Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: The National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic (in Russian).
Kulu, H. (2006). Fertility of internal migrants: comparison between Austria and Poland. Population, Space and Place 12(3): 147-170.
Kulu, H. (2005). Migration and fertility: competing hypotheses re-examined. European Journal of Population 21(1): 51−87.
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.
Kumskov, G. (2002). Patterns and Peculiarities of Contemporary Migration Processes in Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University (in Russian).
Kumskova, N. (1983). Mechanisms of Population Mobility in Kirgizia. Frunze, Kyrgyzstan (in Russian).
Kumskova, N., Kumskov, G., and Ploskich, E. (2004). Contemporary Problems of Internal Migration in Kyrgyzstan. Bishkek: UNFPA in Kyrgyzstan (in Russian).
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.
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.
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).
Nedoluzhko, L. (2003). Socio-economic reasons for fertility reduction. Vestnic 2(4): 24-30 (Bishkek: Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University; in Russian).
NSC of the Kyrgyz Republic (2006). Men and Women of the Kyrgyz Republic. Bishkek: National Statistical Committee of the Kyrgyz Republic.
Perelli-Harris, B. (2005). The path to lowest-low fertility in Ukraine. Population Studies 59(1): 55-70.
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).
Sarygulov, B. (2001). The Current Demographic Situation in Kyrgyzstan and Alternatives to its Development. Bishkek: UNFPA in Kyrgyzstan (in Russian).
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.
Sifman, R. (1974). Fertility Dynamics in the USSR. Moscow: Statistica (in Russian).
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.
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.
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.
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.
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).
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.
World Bank (2006). Country profiles. Kyrgyzstan.
Yavuz, S. (2006). Completing the fertility transition: third birth developments by language groups in Turkey. Demographic Research 15(15): 435-460.