Volume 19 - Article 11 | Pages 261–292
Albania: Trends and patterns, proximate determinants and policies of fertility change
By Arjan Gjonca, Arnstein Aassve, Letizia Mencarini
This article is part of the Special Collection 7 „Childbearing Trends and Policies in Europe“
Abstract
For a very long time, Albania has had one of the highest levels of fertility in Europe: in 2002 the total fertility rate of 2.2 children per woman was the highest in Europe. Although this current level is high, the country has experienced a rapid fertility reduction during the last 50 years: a TFR decline from 7 to 2.2. This reduction has occurred in the absence of modern contraception and abortion, which indicates the significance of investments in the social agenda during the communist regime that produced policies with indirect effects on fertility. Most significant of these were policies focused on education, in particular on female education. Social and demographic settings for a further fertility reduction in Albania have been present since 1990. Contraception and abortion have been legalized and available since the early 1990s, but knowledge of their use is still not widespread in the country, largely due to the interplay between traditional and modern norms of Albanian society. This chapter points out that future fertility levels will be determined not only by new policies that might be introduced, but predominantly by the balance of this interplay.
Author’s Affiliation
- Arjan Gjonca - London School of Economics and Political Science, United Kingdom EMAIL
 - Arnstein Aassve - Università Bocconi, Italy EMAIL
 - Letizia Mencarini - Università Bocconi, Italy EMAIL
 
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
            What is your couple type?  Gender ideology, housework sharing, and babies
            
                Volume 32 - Article 30
        
            Youth poverty and transition to adulthood in Europe
            
                Volume 15 - Article 2
        
            Happy parents’ tweets: An exploration of Italian Twitter data using sentiment analysis
            
                Volume 40 - Article 25
        
            Parents’ subjective well-being after their first child and declining fertility expectations
            
                Volume 39 - Article 9
        
            Youth prospects in a time of economic recession
            
                Volume 29 - Article 36
        
            Grandparenting and mothers’ labour force participation: A comparative analysis using the Generations and Gender Survey
            
                Volume 27 - Article 3
        
            Women´s wages and childbearing decisions: Evidence from Italy
            
                Volume 22 - Article 19
        
            Does fertility decrease household consumption?: An analysis of poverty dynamics and fertility in Indonesia
            
                Volume 20 - Article 26
        
            Gender equity and fertility intentions in Italy and the Netherlands
            
                Volume 18 - Article 1
        
            Similarities and differences between two cohorts of young adults in Italy: Results of a CATI survey on transition to adulthood
            
                Volume 15 - Article 5
        
            Old-Age Mortality in Germany prior to and after Reunification
            
                Volume 3 - Article 1
        
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
            Early unintended childbearing and unsecured debt in the United States
            
                Volume 53 - Article 27
                | Keywords: 
                    demography,
                    fertility,
                    gender,
                    life course,
                    mothers
        
            Neighbors’ social attitudes predict variations in live births among the Amish of Holmes County, Ohio, United States
            
                Volume 53 - Article 25
                | Keywords: 
                    Amish,
                    diffusion,
                    fertility,
                    household,
                    proximity,
                    religion,
                    spatial analysis
        
            Analysing migrant fertility using machine learning techniques: An application of random survival forest to longitudinal data from France
            
                Volume 53 - Article 21
                | Keywords: 
                    fertility,
                    immigrants,
                    machine learning,
                    random survival forest,
                    survival analysis
        
            Attitudes toward child well-being in diverse families across Europe
            
                Volume 53 - Article 11
                | Keywords: 
                    attitudes,
                    children,
                    Europe,
                    European Social Survey,
                    family,
                    gender,
                    same-sex couples,
                    single parenthood,
                    stepfamily
        
            The partnership, fertility, and employment trajectories of immigrants in the United Kingdom: An intersectional life course approach using three-channel sequence analysis
            
                Volume 53 - Article 10
                | Keywords: 
                    employment,
                    fertility,
                    immigrants,
                    multi-channel sequence analysis,
                    partnership,
                    United Kingdom
        
Cited References: 41
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar