Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Second Generation Mothers. Do the children of immigrants adjust their fertility to host country norms?

Stanfors, Maria LU and Scott, Kirk LU (2008) European Population Conference, 2008
Abstract
This chapter explores the fertility behavior, specifically the transition to parenthood, of the second generation, i.e. the children of immigrants, in Sweden from an integration perspective. We examine the impact of education, income, labor market attachment, nationality and immigrant experience on first births of second generation women and contrast it with that of the native Swedish-born population. Using a longitudinal data set constructed from register data maintained by Statistics Sweden, we examine childless women born in Sweden with at least one immigrant parent from 16 national backgrounds and investigate their transition to parenthood. We find that there is an overall adherence to a common pattern for the transition to first-time... (More)
This chapter explores the fertility behavior, specifically the transition to parenthood, of the second generation, i.e. the children of immigrants, in Sweden from an integration perspective. We examine the impact of education, income, labor market attachment, nationality and immigrant experience on first births of second generation women and contrast it with that of the native Swedish-born population. Using a longitudinal data set constructed from register data maintained by Statistics Sweden, we examine childless women born in Sweden with at least one immigrant parent from 16 national backgrounds and investigate their transition to parenthood. We find that there is an overall adherence to a common pattern for the transition to first-time motherhood although nationality background does matter. The effects of various forms of participation and non-participation in the labor force do not vary greatly between those with immigrant background and the native Swedish-born. Among all sub-groups, we find a higher propensity to begin childbearing among those who are established in the labor market. The risk of having a first birth is reduced the most among students. Having parents of mixed nationality background is associated with reduced propensities to start childbearing. The similarity across different nationality groups supports the notion of integration and adjustment among second generation mothers to a Swedish fertility norm that most likely is supported by institutional factors, working through economic incentives, affecting all subgroups in a similar way. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
conference name
European Population Conference, 2008
conference location
Barcelona, Spain
conference dates
2008-07-09 - 2008-07-12
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b20587de-57bd-4a2e-bf28-a42378c6433b (old id 1515368)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 14:11:18
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:18:49
@misc{b20587de-57bd-4a2e-bf28-a42378c6433b,
  abstract     = {{This chapter explores the fertility behavior, specifically the transition to parenthood, of the second generation, i.e. the children of immigrants, in Sweden from an integration perspective. We examine the impact of education, income, labor market attachment, nationality and immigrant experience on first births of second generation women and contrast it with that of the native Swedish-born population. Using a longitudinal data set constructed from register data maintained by Statistics Sweden, we examine childless women born in Sweden with at least one immigrant parent from 16 national backgrounds and investigate their transition to parenthood. We find that there is an overall adherence to a common pattern for the transition to first-time motherhood although nationality background does matter. The effects of various forms of participation and non-participation in the labor force do not vary greatly between those with immigrant background and the native Swedish-born. Among all sub-groups, we find a higher propensity to begin childbearing among those who are established in the labor market. The risk of having a first birth is reduced the most among students. Having parents of mixed nationality background is associated with reduced propensities to start childbearing. The similarity across different nationality groups supports the notion of integration and adjustment among second generation mothers to a Swedish fertility norm that most likely is supported by institutional factors, working through economic incentives, affecting all subgroups in a similar way.}},
  author       = {{Stanfors, Maria and Scott, Kirk}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Second Generation Mothers. Do the children of immigrants adjust their fertility to host country norms?}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}