Determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant women

Immigrant women are frequently found to have higher fertility relative to women in the majority population. This is often attributed to their socioeconomic characteristics, cultural preferences and patterns of childbearing, and adaptation to the destination context. However, several limitations in t...

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Main Author: White, Kari Lyn
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2904
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-05-29042015-09-20T16:59:40ZDeterminants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant womenWhite, Kari LynImmigrant womenImmigrant fertility ratesFertility ratesFertilityMigrationImmigration and emigrationContraceptionMexicoTurkeyImmigrant women are frequently found to have higher fertility relative to women in the majority population. This is often attributed to their socioeconomic characteristics, cultural preferences and patterns of childbearing, and adaptation to the destination context. However, several limitations in the research to date may mask the associations and processes which shape women’s fertility: 1) frequently used indicators are not sensitive to the way in which fertility is shaped by the migration process 2) key proximate determinants of fertility are often not integrated into analyses and 3) non‐migrant women in sending countries are often excluded as a reference for immigrant women’s childbearing behavior. In order to assess how women’s migratory moves and social context affect fertility, I compare the risk of first birth and patterns of contraceptive use at higher‐order parities for non‐migrant, immigrant and native‐born women. For these analyses, I use data from nationally‐representative surveys of reproductive health and family formation from Mexico, the United States, Turkey and Germany. The results from these analyses demonstrate that both foreign‐born Mexican‐ and Turkish‐origin immigrant women experience first birth earlier than non-migrants, second generation immigrants, and native-born women at destination. However the underlying determinants of earlier birth are different for these two groups. There are also differences for second generation women; US-born Mexicans experience first birth at significantly younger ages than whites, whereas age at first birth is very similar for German-born Turkish women and ethnic Germans. Furthermore, patterns of contraceptive use among immigrant women who have at least one child are notably different than patterns observed for non-migrants. US-born women have similar contraceptive use compared to whites, but Mexican-born women are less likely to use permanent and highly effective methods, even after controlling for fertility intentions. Turkish-origin women in Germany exhibit large differences in contraceptive use relative to non-migrant women, particularly the very low reported use of withdrawal. These findings indicate that fertility determinants vary across origin and destination context. The observed differences between Mexican- and Turkish-origin women suggest that distinct processes of migration, socialization, and access to contraception lead to variation in the fertility outcomes for these two groups.text2011-06-01T20:38:59Z2011-06-01T20:39:08Z2011-06-01T20:38:59Z2011-06-01T20:39:08Z2011-052011-06-01May 20112011-06-01T20:39:08Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2904eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Immigrant women
Immigrant fertility rates
Fertility rates
Fertility
Migration
Immigration and emigration
Contraception
Mexico
Turkey
spellingShingle Immigrant women
Immigrant fertility rates
Fertility rates
Fertility
Migration
Immigration and emigration
Contraception
Mexico
Turkey
White, Kari Lyn
Determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant women
description Immigrant women are frequently found to have higher fertility relative to women in the majority population. This is often attributed to their socioeconomic characteristics, cultural preferences and patterns of childbearing, and adaptation to the destination context. However, several limitations in the research to date may mask the associations and processes which shape women’s fertility: 1) frequently used indicators are not sensitive to the way in which fertility is shaped by the migration process 2) key proximate determinants of fertility are often not integrated into analyses and 3) non‐migrant women in sending countries are often excluded as a reference for immigrant women’s childbearing behavior. In order to assess how women’s migratory moves and social context affect fertility, I compare the risk of first birth and patterns of contraceptive use at higher‐order parities for non‐migrant, immigrant and native‐born women. For these analyses, I use data from nationally‐representative surveys of reproductive health and family formation from Mexico, the United States, Turkey and Germany. The results from these analyses demonstrate that both foreign‐born Mexican‐ and Turkish‐origin immigrant women experience first birth earlier than non-migrants, second generation immigrants, and native-born women at destination. However the underlying determinants of earlier birth are different for these two groups. There are also differences for second generation women; US-born Mexicans experience first birth at significantly younger ages than whites, whereas age at first birth is very similar for German-born Turkish women and ethnic Germans. Furthermore, patterns of contraceptive use among immigrant women who have at least one child are notably different than patterns observed for non-migrants. US-born women have similar contraceptive use compared to whites, but Mexican-born women are less likely to use permanent and highly effective methods, even after controlling for fertility intentions. Turkish-origin women in Germany exhibit large differences in contraceptive use relative to non-migrant women, particularly the very low reported use of withdrawal. These findings indicate that fertility determinants vary across origin and destination context. The observed differences between Mexican- and Turkish-origin women suggest that distinct processes of migration, socialization, and access to contraception lead to variation in the fertility outcomes for these two groups. === text
author White, Kari Lyn
author_facet White, Kari Lyn
author_sort White, Kari Lyn
title Determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant women
title_short Determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant women
title_full Determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant women
title_fullStr Determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant women
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of Mexican and Turkish immigrant women
title_sort determinants of fertility across context : a comparison of mexican and turkish immigrant women
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-2904
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