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Cohort, Policy, and Process: The Implications for Migrant Fertility in West Germany
[journal article]
Abstract Although a growing literature explores the relationship between migration and fertility, far less scholarship has examined how migrant childbearing varies over time, including across migrant cohorts. I extend previous research by exploring migrant-cohort differences in fertility and the role of chan... view more
Although a growing literature explores the relationship between migration and fertility, far less scholarship has examined how migrant childbearing varies over time, including across migrant cohorts. I extend previous research by exploring migrant-cohort differences in fertility and the role of changing composition by education and type of family migration. Using 1984-2016 German Socio-Economic Panel data, I investigate the transition into first, second, and third birth among foreign-born women in West Germany. Results from an event-history analysis reveal that education and type of family migration - including marriage migration and family reunions - contribute to differences in first birth across migrant cohorts. Specifically, more rapid entry into first birth among recent migrants from Turkey stems from a greater representation of marriage migrants across arrival cohorts, while increasing education is associated with reduced first birth propensities among recent migrants from Southern Europe. I also find variation in the risk of higher parity transitions across migrant cohorts, particularly lower third birth risks among recent arrivals from Turkey, likely a result of changing exposures within origin and destination contexts. These findings suggest that as political and socioeconomic circumstances vary within origin and destination contexts, selection, adaptation, and socialization processes jointly shape childbearing behavior.... view less
Keywords
microcensus; migration; fertility; Federal Republic of Germany; old federal states; country of origin; cohort analysis; fertility rate; birth trend; Turkey
Classification
Population Studies, Sociology of Population
Migration, Sociology of Migration
Free Keywords
West Germany; migrant cohort; Mikrozensus 1985; Mikrozensus 2016
Document language
English
Publication Year
2022
Page/Pages
p. 221-246
Journal
Demography, 59 (2022) 1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1215/00703370-9629146
ISSN
1533-7790
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0