Special Collection 3 - Article 5 | Pages 117–134
Step-families and Childbearing Desires in Europe
This article is part of the Special Collection 3 "Contemporary Research on European Fertility: Perspectives and Developments"
Abstract
Increases in union stability and non-union childbearing during the latter half of the 20th century produced substantial increases in the prevalence of step-families. Research on step-family fertility in several European countries and the United States show that, net of a couple’s combined number of children (hers, his and theirs), birth risks are elevated when the child is the couple’s first or second.
These patterns have been interpreted in terms of unique values of first and second shared children that overcome costs of rearing larger numbers of children in stepfamilies. Such inferences require that all births are wanted or that unwanted births are as likely for couples with as for those without stepchildren.
Analyses of several European fertility and family surveys show that previously observed patterns of stepfamily childbearing are replicated in desires for another child, providing stronger support for motivational explanations of childbearing patterns in step-families.
Author's Affiliation
- Elizabeth Thomson - Stockholms Universitet, Sweden EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
Life-table representations of family dynamics in the 21st century
Volume 37 - Article 35
Register-based estimates of parents' coresidence in Sweden, 1969-2007
Volume 29 - Article 42
Children’s Experiences of Family Disruption in Sweden: Differentials by Parent Education over Three Decades
Volume 23 - Article 17
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