Literature DB >> 12178152

A search for aggregate-level effects of education on fertility, using data from Zimbabwe.

O Kravdal.   

Abstract

The analysis was based on the 1994 Zimbabwe Demographic and Health Survey combined with aggregate data from the 1992 census. Discrete-time hazard models for first and higher-order births were estimated for 1990-94. The average length of education in the district and the proportion who are literate were found to have no impact on a woman's birth rate above and beyond that of her own education, when it was controlled for urbanization. This was the case for women who themselves had little or no education as well as for the better educated. So far, no significant influence of aggregate education on fertility has been well documented in the literature either. However, in this study, aggregate-level effects appeared in models for fertility desires and contraceptive use among married women with at least one child.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Africa; Africa South Of The Sahara; Birth Rate; Demographic And Health Surveys; Demographic Factors; Demographic Surveys; Developing Countries; Eastern Africa; Economic Factors; Educational Status--women; English Speaking Africa; Fertility; Fertility Determinants; Fertility Measurements; Population; Population Dynamics; Research Report; Socioeconomic Factors; Socioeconomic Status; Women; Zimbabwe

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 12178152     DOI: 10.4054/demres.2000.3.3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Demogr Res


  5 in total

1.  Education and fertility in sub-Saharan Africa: individual and community effects.

Authors:  Øystein Kravdal
Journal:  Demography       Date:  2002-05

2.  Modern contraceptive use among women in Uganda: An analysis of trend and patterns (1995-2011).

Authors:  Jimmy Ronald Andi; Robert Wamala; Bruno Ocaya; Allen Kabagenyi
Journal:  Etude Popul Afr       Date:  2014-07

3.  Survival Time to Modern Contraceptive Uses from the Resumption of Sexual Intercourse Among Postpartum Women in Ethiopia.

Authors:  Mohammed Ahmed; Abdu Seid
Journal:  Int J Womens Health       Date:  2020-08-19

4.  Declining fertility on the frontier: the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Authors:  David L Carr; William K Y Pan; Richard E Bilsborrow
Journal:  Popul Environ       Date:  2006-09-01

5.  The impact of women's education, workforce experience, and the One Child Policy on fertility in China: a census study in Guangdong, China.

Authors:  Manyu Lan; Yaoqiu Kuang
Journal:  Springerplus       Date:  2016-10-04
  5 in total

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