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https://doi.org/10.12765/CPoS-2021-14

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Fertility of Roma Minorities in Central and Eastern Europe

[journal article]

Szabó, Laura
Kiss, Igor
Šprocha, Branislav
Spéder, Zsolt

Abstract

We analyse Roma fertility in four neighbouring countries in Central and Eastern Europe with a large Roma minority: in Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Serbia. The sources of data are the respective national population censuses from 2011. Fertility is measured at the birth cohort level as the average n... view more

We analyse Roma fertility in four neighbouring countries in Central and Eastern Europe with a large Roma minority: in Hungary, Slovakia, Romania and Serbia. The sources of data are the respective national population censuses from 2011. Fertility is measured at the birth cohort level as the average number of children ever born. We make an international comparison of the fertility of Roma and non-Roma majority population women on the basis of completed education. In the case of Hungary, we also explore how the correlation between fertility and ethnic identity is modified when completed education and ethnic residential segregation are controlled. The fertility of Roma women is far above the majority population average in all birth cohorts and in each country. Educational attainment modifies this relationship. The fertility of highly educated Roma and majority population women is converging. The exposure to majority behaviour also has an effect. The lower the level of ethnic residential segregation, the smaller the difference between the fertility of Roma and majority population women. Completed education and residential segregation may exert different forces at the two ends of the educational hierarchy when their joint effect is explored. At the upper end of the social hierarchy, neither segregation nor ethnicity matters; at the lower end, however, both exposure to ethnic majority behaviour and ethnicity matter.... view less

Keywords
Hungary; Slovakia; Romania; Serbia; ethnic group; minority; gipsy; fertility; socioeconomic factors; level of education; segregation

Classification
Population Studies, Sociology of Population

Free Keywords
residential segregation

Document language
English

Publication Year
2021

Page/Pages
p. 387-424

Journal
Comparative Population Studies - Zeitschrift für Bevölkerungswissenschaft, 46 (2021)

ISSN
1869-8999

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.