Volume 36 - Article 41 | Pages 1209–1254
Childbearing among first- and second-generation Russians in Estonia against the background of the sending and host countries
By Allan Puur, Leen Rahnu, Liili Abuladze, Luule Sakkeus, Sergei Zakharov
This article is part of the Special Collection 23 "Childbearing among the Descendants of Immigrants in Europe"
Abstract
Background: An expanding literature documents the childbearing patterns of migrants and their descendants in contemporary Europe. The existing evidence pertains mainly to the northern, western, and southern regions of the continent, while less is known about the fertility of migrants who have moved between the countries of Eastern Europe.
Objective: The aim of this study is to examine the fertility patterns of first- and second-generation Russians in Estonia, relative to the sending and host populations.
Methods: The study draws on the Estonian and Russian Generations and Gender Surveys. Proportional hazards models are estimated for the transitions to first, second, and third births.
Results: Russian migrants in Estonia exhibit greater similarity to the sending population, with a lower propensity for having a second and third birth than the host population. This pattern extends to the descendants of migrants. However, mixed Estonian-Russian parentage, enrolment in Estonian-language schools, and residence among the host population are associated with the convergence of Russians’ childbearing behaviour with the host-country patterns. The findings support the cultural maintenance and adaptation perspectives; selectivity was found to be less important.
Contribution: The study focuses on a previously under-researched context and underscores the importance of contextual factors in shaping migrants’ fertility patterns. It raises the possibility that, depending on the childbearing trends and levels among the sending and receiving populations, large-scale migration may reduce rather than increase aggregate fertility in the host country. With the advancement of the fertility transition in sending countries, this situation may become more common in Europe in the future.
Author's Affiliation
- Allan Puur - Tallinna Ülikool, Estonia EMAIL
- Leen Rahnu - Tallinna Ülikool, Estonia EMAIL
- Liili Abuladze - Tallinna Ülikool, Estonia EMAIL
- Luule Sakkeus - Tallinna Ülikool, Estonia EMAIL
- Sergei Zakharov - National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE), Russian Federation EMAIL
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
The formation of ethnically mixed partnerships in Estonia: A stalling trend from a two-sided perspective
Volume 38 - Article 38
Partnership dynamics among migrants and their descendants in Estonia
Volume 32 - Article 56
Varying association between education and second births in Europe: Comparative analysis based on the EU-SILC data
Volume 31 - Article 27
Co-ethnic marriage versus intermarriage among immigrants
and their descendants: A comparison across seven European countries using event-history analysis
Volume 39 - Article 17
Jobs, careers, and becoming a parent under state socialist and market conditions: Evidence from Estonia 1971-2006
Volume 30 - Article 64
Intergenerational family constellations in contemporary Europe: Evidence from the Generations and Gender Survey
Volume 25 - Article 4
First union formation in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania: patterns across countries and gender
Volume 17 - Article 10
Longevity of World War II Estonian volunteers in the Finnish Army: A follow-up study of the impact of the post-war life course and repressions
Volume 43 - Article 39
Socioeconomic and cultural differentials in mortality in a late 19th century urban setting: A linked records study from Tartu, Estonia, 1897-1900
Volume 36 - Article 1
Effects of education on second births before and after societal transition: Evidence from the Estonian GGS
Volume 22 - Article 28
Reconciling studies of men’s gender attitudes and fertility: Response to Westoff and Higgins
Volume 22 - Article 8
Men's childbearing desires and views of the male role in Europe at the dawn of the 21st century
Volume 19 - Article 56
Russian Federation: From the first to second demographic transition
Volume 19 - Article 24
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