Household Instability and Girls' Teen Childbearing.

IF 3.6 1区 社会学 Q1 DEMOGRAPHY
Kristin L Perkins
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

More than one third of U.S. children spend part of their childhood living with extended family members. By age 18, nearly 40% of U.S. children experience a household change involving a nonparent. Research has found that having extended family or nonrelatives join or leave children's households negatively affects children's educational attainment. I argue that we need new ways of theorizing, conceptualizing, and measuring household changes and their effects on children. I use the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and marginal structural models with inverse probability of treatment weighting to estimate the association between household changes involving parents and nonparents and teen childbearing among girls. I find that experiencing household changes involving nonparents and parents during childhood is associated with a significantly higher probability of having a child as a teenager than experiencing no changes. In addition, the association between changes involving parents and teen childbearing is statistically indistinguishable from the association between changes involving nonparents and teen childbearing, suggesting that household composition shifts involving nonparents can be as disruptive to girls as those involving parents.

家庭不稳定与少女生育问题。
超过三分之一的美国儿童童年的一部分时间与大家庭成员生活在一起。到18岁时,近40%的美国儿童经历了一次涉及非父母的家庭变动。研究发现,让大家庭或非亲属加入或离开儿童家庭会对儿童的教育程度产生负面影响。我认为,我们需要新的方法来理论化、概念化和衡量家庭变化及其对儿童的影响。我使用收入动态小组研究和具有治疗加权逆概率的边际结构模型来估计涉及父母的家庭变化与非父母和女孩青少年生育之间的关联。我发现,在童年时期经历涉及非父母和父母的家庭变化,与没有变化相比,青少年时期生孩子的概率要高得多。此外,从统计数据来看,涉及父母和青少年生育的变化之间的关联与涉及非父母和青少年分娩的变化之间没有区别,这表明涉及非父母的家庭组成变化对女孩的破坏性可能与涉及父母的家庭组分变化一样大。
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来源期刊
Demography
Demography DEMOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
2.90%
发文量
82
期刊介绍: Since its founding in 1964, the journal Demography has mirrored the vitality, diversity, high intellectual standard and wide impact of the field on which it reports. Demography presents the highest quality original research of scholars in a broad range of disciplines, including anthropology, biology, economics, geography, history, psychology, public health, sociology, and statistics. The journal encompasses a wide variety of methodological approaches to population research. Its geographic focus is global, with articles addressing demographic matters from around the planet. Its temporal scope is broad, as represented by research that explores demographic phenomena spanning the ages from the past to the present, and reaching toward the future. Authors whose work is published in Demography benefit from the wide audience of population scientists their research will reach. Also in 2011 Demography remains the most cited journal among population studies and demographic periodicals. Published bimonthly, Demography is the flagship journal of the Population Association of America, reaching the membership of one of the largest professional demographic associations in the world.
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