Literature DB >> 9545626

Migration, fertility, and state policy in Hubei Province, China.

A Goldstein1, M White, S Goldstein.   

Abstract

Despite China's one-child family planning policy, the nation experienced a slight rise in the birth rate in the mid-1980s. Many observers attributed this rise to the heightened fertility of those rural-to-urban migrants who moved without a change in registration (temporary migrants), presumably to avoid the surveillance of family planning programs at origin and destination. Using a sequential logit analysis with life-history data from a 1988 survey of Hubei Province, we test this possibility by comparing nonmigrants, permanent migrants, and temporary migrants. While changing family planning policies have a strong impact on timing of first birth and on the likelihood of higher-order births, migrants generally do not have more children than nonmigrants. In fact, migration tends to lower the propensity to have a child. More specifically, the fertility of temporary migrants does not differ significantly from that of other women.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9545626

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Demography        ISSN: 0070-3370


  7 in total

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Authors: 
Journal:  China Popul Today       Date:  1992-02

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Journal:  Popul Stud (Camb)       Date:  1984-03

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Authors:  G Liu; S Goldstein
Journal:  Chin Environ Dev       Date:  1996 Spring-Summer

7.  Internal migration in China, 1950-1988.

Authors:  Z Liang; M J White
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1996-08
  7 in total
  11 in total

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Authors:  Holly E Reed; Catherine S Andrzejewski; Michael J White
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7.  Using Discrete-time Event History Fertility Models to Simulate Total Fertility Rates and Other Fertility Measures.

Authors:  Jennifer Van Hook; Claire E Altman
Journal:  Popul Res Policy Rev       Date:  2013-08-01

8.  Illegal births and legal abortions--the case of China.

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Journal:  Reprod Health       Date:  2005-08-11       Impact factor: 3.223

9.  Urbanisation and health in China.

Authors:  Peng Gong; Song Liang; Elizabeth J Carlton; Qingwu Jiang; Jianyong Wu; Lei Wang; Justin V Remais
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2012-03-03       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  Household Registration System, Migration, and Inequity in Healthcare Access.

Authors:  Bocong Yuan; Jiannan Li; Zhaoguo Wang; Lily Wu
Journal:  Healthcare (Basel)       Date:  2019-04-11
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