同居伴侣的生育:种族和民族差异。

Wendy D. Manning
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引用次数: 110

摘要

同居提供了一个双亲家庭,在这个家庭中,人们可以在婚姻之外生育和抚养孩子。然而,人们对同居夫妇怀孕并决定生孩子的条件知之甚少。方法全国家庭成长调查提供了美国女性同居和生育史的详细数据。使用生命表技术、事件历史分析和逻辑回归来了解在同居联盟中生育时间的种族和民族差异,以及少数民族成员是否比白人更容易接受同居联盟中的生育。结果在多变量模型中,西班牙裔女性比白人女性同居怀孕的可能性高77%,黑人女性比白人女性同居怀孕的可能性高69%。在同居期间怀孕的女性中,西班牙裔女性在孩子出生后继续与伴侣同居的可能性几乎是白人女性的两倍,黑人女性是白人女性的三倍。此外,研究发现,与白人女性同居所生的孩子相比,西班牙裔女性同居所生的孩子的预期怀孕率要高70%。结论就生育而言,同居在美国家庭制度中并不是所有种族和民族都保持相同的地位。这些与生育相关行为的种族和民族差异不能用社会经济差异来解释。根据同居期间的生育水平、生育时的关系状况和孩子的意向状况,与白人或黑人相比,西班牙裔妇女似乎更能接受同居作为建立家庭的场所。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Childbearing in cohabiting unions: racial and ethnic differences.
CONTEXT Cohabitation provides a two-parent family union in which to have and raise children outside of marriage. Little is known, however, about the conditions under which cohabiting couples conceive and decide to have children. METHODS The National Survey of Family Growth provides detailed data on the cohabitation and fertility histories of American women. Life-table techniques, event-history analyses and logistic regression were employed to understand the racial and ethnic differences in the timing of childbearing within cohabiting unions and whether childbearing within cohabiting unions is more acceptable to members of minorities than to whites. RESULTS In multivariate models, Hispanic women were found to be 77% more likely than white women to conceive a child in cohabitation and black women were 69% more likely than white women to do so. Among women who became pregnant while cohabiting, Hispanic women were almost twice as likely and black women were three times as likely as white women to remain cohabiting with their partner when their child was born. In addition, children born to Hispanic women in cohabiting unions were found to be 70% more likely to be intended than were those born to cohabiting white women. CONCLUSIONS In terms of fertility, cohabitation does not maintain the same place in the American family system for all racial and ethnic groups. These racial and ethnic differences in fertility-related behavior are not explained by socioeconomic differences. Based on levels of childbearing during cohabitation, relationship status at time of birth and intention status of children, it appears that cohabitation is a more acceptable arena for family building among Hispanic women than among whites or blacks.
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