The fertility of internal migrants to Kinshasa

Abstract The rapid population growth of many African cities has important implications for population health, yet little is known about factors contributing to increasing population, such as the fertility of internal migrants. We examine whether in-migrants to Kinshasa have different fertility patte...

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Main Authors: Philip Anglewicz, Jamaica Corker, Patrick Kayembe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-05-01
Series:Genus
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-017-0020-8
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spelling doaj-b16c748b64c04544ad596fee6b32795e2020-11-24T21:46:37ZengSpringerOpenGenus2035-55562017-05-0173111810.1186/s41118-017-0020-8The fertility of internal migrants to KinshasaPhilip Anglewicz0Jamaica Corker1Patrick Kayembe2Department of Global Community Health and Behavioral Science, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Tulane UniversityBill and Melinda Gates FoundationDivision of Epidemiology and Biostatistics School of Public Health, Kinshasa School of Public Health, University of KinshasaAbstract The rapid population growth of many African cities has important implications for population health, yet little is known about factors contributing to increasing population, such as the fertility of internal migrants. We examine whether in-migrants to Kinshasa have different fertility patterns than lifetime Kinshasa residents, and identify characteristics of migrants that may explain differences in fertility. We also use detailed migration histories to examine whether fertility differs by features of migration. We use representative data from the PMA2020 Project for 2197 women in Kinshasa, including 340 women who moved to Kinshasa. We examine differences between migrants and non-migrants in fertility and other fertility-related characteristics. We also examine whether fertility differs by duration of residence in Kinshasa, number of lifetime moves, age at first migration, urban/rural classification of birthplace, and the distinction between intra-Kinshasa migration and migration to Kinshasa.. Migrants have significantly higher fertility than permanent Kinshasa residents, but the difference is relatively small in magnitude. This higher fertility appears due in part to patterns of contraceptive use among migrants. There is noteworthy heterogeneity among migrants: higher fertility among migrants is associated with longer duration in Kinshasa, more lifetime moves, urban-Kinshasa migration, older age at first migration, and moving to Kinshasa from outside (as opposed to intra-Kinshasa migration).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-017-0020-8FertilityUrbanizationInternal migrationDemocratic Republic of Congo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Philip Anglewicz
Jamaica Corker
Patrick Kayembe
spellingShingle Philip Anglewicz
Jamaica Corker
Patrick Kayembe
The fertility of internal migrants to Kinshasa
Genus
Fertility
Urbanization
Internal migration
Democratic Republic of Congo
author_facet Philip Anglewicz
Jamaica Corker
Patrick Kayembe
author_sort Philip Anglewicz
title The fertility of internal migrants to Kinshasa
title_short The fertility of internal migrants to Kinshasa
title_full The fertility of internal migrants to Kinshasa
title_fullStr The fertility of internal migrants to Kinshasa
title_full_unstemmed The fertility of internal migrants to Kinshasa
title_sort fertility of internal migrants to kinshasa
publisher SpringerOpen
series Genus
issn 2035-5556
publishDate 2017-05-01
description Abstract The rapid population growth of many African cities has important implications for population health, yet little is known about factors contributing to increasing population, such as the fertility of internal migrants. We examine whether in-migrants to Kinshasa have different fertility patterns than lifetime Kinshasa residents, and identify characteristics of migrants that may explain differences in fertility. We also use detailed migration histories to examine whether fertility differs by features of migration. We use representative data from the PMA2020 Project for 2197 women in Kinshasa, including 340 women who moved to Kinshasa. We examine differences between migrants and non-migrants in fertility and other fertility-related characteristics. We also examine whether fertility differs by duration of residence in Kinshasa, number of lifetime moves, age at first migration, urban/rural classification of birthplace, and the distinction between intra-Kinshasa migration and migration to Kinshasa.. Migrants have significantly higher fertility than permanent Kinshasa residents, but the difference is relatively small in magnitude. This higher fertility appears due in part to patterns of contraceptive use among migrants. There is noteworthy heterogeneity among migrants: higher fertility among migrants is associated with longer duration in Kinshasa, more lifetime moves, urban-Kinshasa migration, older age at first migration, and moving to Kinshasa from outside (as opposed to intra-Kinshasa migration).
topic Fertility
Urbanization
Internal migration
Democratic Republic of Congo
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41118-017-0020-8
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