Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949

This article investigates the association between, participation in, and exposure to voluntary organisations and marital fertility during the European fertility transition from 1880 to 1949. This is achieved using individual-level longitudinal demographic data from northern Sweden linked with indivi...

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Main Author: Johan Junkka
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: International Instititute of Social History 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doaj.org/article/d1e038fee382468eb0598976ac7fef42
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spelling ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:d1e038fee382468eb0598976ac7fef42 2023-05-15T17:44:40+02:00 Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949 Johan Junkka 2018-09-01T00:00:00Z https://doaj.org/article/d1e038fee382468eb0598976ac7fef42 EN eng International Instititute of Social History https://test.openjournals.nl/hlcs/article/view/9335 https://doaj.org/toc/2352-6343 2352-6343 https://doaj.org/article/d1e038fee382468eb0598976ac7fef42 Historical Life Course Studies, Vol 5 (2018) Voluntary organisations Voluntary associations Social networks Sweden Fertility transition Economic theory. Demography HB1-3840 article 2018 ftdoajarticles 2022-12-31T04:48:43Z This article investigates the association between, participation in, and exposure to voluntary organisations and marital fertility during the European fertility transition from 1880 to 1949. This is achieved using individual-level longitudinal demographic data from northern Sweden linked with individual-level information on voluntary organisation membership and contextual level information on organisation activity. How living near an organisation influenced fertility is measured using mixed effect Cox regressions. The association to participation for both men and women is tested by matching members to a control group through propensity score matching before estimating differences in risks of another birth using Cox regressions. The results show that being exposed to an organisation was related to lower fertility. Joining a union or a temperance organisation showed even stronger negative associations, but only for male members, while female members showed no significant difference in fertility. The results suggest that reproductive decisions were not simple responses by the individual couple to structural changes but were also shaped within the social networks of which they were a part. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Sweden Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
institution Open Polar
collection Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles
op_collection_id ftdoajarticles
language English
topic Voluntary organisations
Voluntary associations
Social networks
Sweden
Fertility transition
Economic theory. Demography
HB1-3840
spellingShingle Voluntary organisations
Voluntary associations
Social networks
Sweden
Fertility transition
Economic theory. Demography
HB1-3840
Johan Junkka
Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949
topic_facet Voluntary organisations
Voluntary associations
Social networks
Sweden
Fertility transition
Economic theory. Demography
HB1-3840
description This article investigates the association between, participation in, and exposure to voluntary organisations and marital fertility during the European fertility transition from 1880 to 1949. This is achieved using individual-level longitudinal demographic data from northern Sweden linked with individual-level information on voluntary organisation membership and contextual level information on organisation activity. How living near an organisation influenced fertility is measured using mixed effect Cox regressions. The association to participation for both men and women is tested by matching members to a control group through propensity score matching before estimating differences in risks of another birth using Cox regressions. The results show that being exposed to an organisation was related to lower fertility. Joining a union or a temperance organisation showed even stronger negative associations, but only for male members, while female members showed no significant difference in fertility. The results suggest that reproductive decisions were not simple responses by the individual couple to structural changes but were also shaped within the social networks of which they were a part.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Johan Junkka
author_facet Johan Junkka
author_sort Johan Junkka
title Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949
title_short Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949
title_full Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949
title_fullStr Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949
title_full_unstemmed Membership in and Presence of Voluntary Organisations during the Swedish Fertility Transition, 1880-1949
title_sort membership in and presence of voluntary organisations during the swedish fertility transition, 1880-1949
publisher International Instititute of Social History
publishDate 2018
url https://doaj.org/article/d1e038fee382468eb0598976ac7fef42
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_source Historical Life Course Studies, Vol 5 (2018)
op_relation https://test.openjournals.nl/hlcs/article/view/9335
https://doaj.org/toc/2352-6343
2352-6343
https://doaj.org/article/d1e038fee382468eb0598976ac7fef42
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