Volume 29 - Article 44 | Pages 1227–1260  

Patterns of reproductive behavior in transitional Italy: The rediscovery of the Italian fertility survey of 1961

By Marco Breschi, Alessio Fornasin, Matteo Manfredini

This article is part of the Special Collection 14 "Socioeconomic status and fertility before, during and after the demographic transition"

Abstract

Background: Few studies have investigated the role of the intermediate variables of fertility at the micro-level in Italy, and, in particular, little is known about the influence of socioeconomic factors. This is the reason that the mechanisms through which women arrived at the control of their own fertility are still largely unexplored.

Objective: We wish to analyze the role of education and socioeconomic determinants on the process of fertility transition in four Italian populations, by focusing on the birth cohorts born between the end of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th century.

Methods: Data comes from the census returns of 1961, which include a Fertility Survey aimed at gathering information on the reproductive history of ever-married women. A negative binomial regression was then carried out to check the influence of some socioeconomic determinants on the completed family size of such women.

Results: Among socioeconomic factors, women's education proves to be more important than family economic status in shaping fertility levels, with highly educated women showing a smaller completed family size than illiterate ones. In particular, fertility differentials by educational attainment appear to be wider at the beginning of the transition.

Conclusions: The use of micro-level data has allowed us to shed some light on the importance of women's education, especially in the first stages of fertility transition, resulting in one of the possible explanations for ist different onsets in the various regions of Italy.

Author's Affiliation

Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research

Deaths and survivors in war: The Italian soldiers in WWI
Volume 40 - Article 22

Demographic responses to short-term stress in a 19th century Tuscan population: The case of household out-migration
Volume 25 - Article 15

Health and socio-demographic conditions as determinants of marriage and social mobility: Male partner choice in Sardinia, late 19th-early 20th century
Volume 22 - Article 33

The Spanish flu and the health system: Considerations from the city of Parma, 1918
Volume 47 - Article 32

"Let’s talk about love": An analysis of the religious and economic factors determining the choice of marital property regime in Italy
Volume 36 - Article 29

For the times they are a changin': The respect for religious precepts through the analysis of the seasonality of marriages. Italy, 1862-2012.
Volume 33 - Article 7

Fertility transition and social stratification in the town of Alghero, Sardinia (1866-1935)
Volume 30 - Article 28

Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research

Educational trends in cohort fertility by birth order: A comparison of England and Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland
Volume 51 - Article 36    | Keywords: birth order, cohort analysis, cross-national study, England, family size, fertility, Northern Ireland, parity, Scotland, Wales

Is single parenthood increasingly an experience of less-educated mothers? A European comparison over five decades
Volume 51 - Article 34    | Keywords: age, children, cross-national comparison, education, Europe, family life course, inequality, single motherhood

A Bayesian model for age at death with cohort effects
Volume 51 - Article 33    | Keywords: age at death, Bayesian approach, cohort effects, Italy, mortality

Higher incomes are increasingly associated with higher fertility: Evidence from the Netherlands, 2008–2022
Volume 51 - Article 26    | Keywords: fertility, income, inequalities, Netherlands, parenthood

A multidimensional global migration model for use in cohort-component population projections
Volume 51 - Article 11    | Keywords: age dependency, education, international migration, migration, modelling, population projection, projections