从历史人口普查数据中的儿童性别比推断“失踪女孩”

M. Szołtysek, Bartosz Ogórek, S. Gruber, Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia
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引用次数: 11

摘要

欧洲历史上的“失踪女孩”这一话题不仅大多被忽视,而且以往针对这一问题的研究通常对现有信息过于轻率,要么拒绝,要么接受歧视女童的说法,而没有评估观察到的儿童性别比例可能归因于机会、死亡率差异或登记质量的可能性。本文通过(1)使用了一个新的历史儿童性别比例数据集,该数据集涵盖了1700年至1926年间欧洲大部分地区;(2)在分析中明确考虑随机变异、人口统计学变异和错误枚举的影响。我们的研究结果提供了证据,证明一些欧洲人口的儿童性别比例远高于通常认为的“自然”水平。虽然这种差异的一部分确实是由于与婴儿死亡率差异和人口普查质量有关的随机噪声和结构特征,但一些观察到的性别比例太高,不能仅仅归因于这些近似因素。因此,这些发现表明,我们的数据中观察到的一些不平衡的性别比例有行为上的解释。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inferring “missing girls” from child sex ratios in historical census data
Abstract The topic of “missing girls” in historical Europe has not only been mostly neglected, but previous research addressing this issue usually took the available information too lightly, either rejecting or accepting the claims that there was discrimination against female children, without assessing the possibility that the observed child sex ratios could be attributable to chance, mortality differentials, or registration quality. This article contributes to this discussion by (1) using a novel dataset of historical child sex ratios that covers a large part of the European geography between 1700 and 1926; and (2) explicitly considering the effects of random variability, demographic variation, and faulty enumeration in the analysis. Our results provide evidence that some of these European populations had child sex ratios well above the levels usually considered “natural”. Although part of this variation is indeed shown to be due to random noise and structural features related to infant mortality differentials and census quality, some of the observed sex ratios are too high to be attributed solely to these proximate factors. Thus, these findings suggest that there are behavioural explanations for some of the unbalanced sex ratios observed in our data.
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