journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36976345/industrial-robots-and-regional-fertility-in-european-countries
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Matysiak, Daniela Bellani, Honorata Bogusz
In this study, we examine whether the long-term structural changes in the labour market, driven by automation, affect fertility. The adoption of industrial robots is used as a proxy for these changes. It has tripled since the mid-1990s in the EU, tremendously changing the conditions of participating in the labour market. On the one hand, new jobs are created, benefitting largely the highly skilled workers. On the other hand, the growing turnover in the labour market and changing content of jobs induce fears of job displacement and make workers continuously adjust to new requirements (reskill, upskill, increase work efforts)...
March 28, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36952097/religiosity-of-migrants-and-natives-in-western-europe-2002-2018-convergence-and-divergence
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ayse Guveli, Lucinda Platt
Patterns of religiosity among both settled and migrant populations have been the subject of intense, and often conflicting, scholarly debate. In Europe, most analysis of migrant religiosity has focused on Islam, though migrants to Western European countries come from a wide range of religions and denominations. Despite a general assumption of assimilation over generations to greater secularization, evidence on trends in religiosity across migrants of different religions and for both first and second generations remains partial...
March 23, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36890348/is-it-better-to-intermarry-immigration-background-of-married-couples-and-suicide-risk-among-native-born-and-migrant-persons-in-sweden
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna Oksuzyan, Sven Drefahl, Jennifer Caputo, Siddartha Aradhya
Marriage is protective against suicide across most populations, including for persons of different ethnicities and immigrant backgrounds. However, the well-being benefits of marriage are contingent upon marital characteristics-such as conflict and quality-that may vary across spousal dyads with different immigration backgrounds. Leveraging Swedish register data, we compare suicide mortality among married persons on the basis of their and their spouse's immigration backgrounds. We find that relative to those in a native Swede-Swede union, Swedish men married to female immigrants and immigrant women married to native men are at higher risk of death by suicide, while immigrants of both genders who are married to someone from their birth country have a lower risk of suicide mortality...
March 8, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36890336/leaving-the-city-counterurbanisation-and-internal-return-migration-in-sweden
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erika Sandow, Emma Lundholm
This paper examines counterurban migration among young families with children in Sweden and the extent to which these moves reflect return migration, recognising the role of family members and family roots at the destination from a life course perspective. Drawing on register data for all young families with children leaving the Swedish metropolitan areas during the years 2003-2013, we analyse the pattern of counterurban moves and explore how the families' socioeconomic characteristics, childhood origins, and links to family networks are associated with becoming a counterurban mover and choice of destination...
March 8, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36864221/love-is-elsewhere-internal-migration-and-marriage-prospects-in-china
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wanru Xiong
Migration and marriage are major life events that might interact and be jointly decided. Places with good labor market opportunities may or may not provide good marriage options. In this paper, I quantify gains and losses in marriage prospects for unmarried migrants and natives during the population redistribution driven by internal migration. I also examine how the experiences differ by individual characteristics and regional factors. The analysis measures marriage prospects using the availability ratio (AR) with adaptive assortative matching norms for every unmarried individual from sample data of the 2010 China population census...
March 2, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36862236/second-birth-fertility-in-germany-social-class-gender-and-the-role-of-economic-uncertainty
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michaela Kreyenfeld, Dirk Konietzka, Philippe Lambert, Vincent Jerald Ramos
Building on a thick strand of the literature on the determinants of higher-order births, this study uses a gender and class perspective to analyse second birth progression rates in Germany. Using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel from 1990 to 2020, individuals are classified based on their occupation into: upper service, lower service, skilled manual/higher-grade routine nonmanual, and semi-/unskilled manual/lower-grade routine nonmanual classes. Results highlight the "economic advantage" of men and women in service classes who experience strongly elevated second birth rates...
March 2, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38153522/correction-well-being-adjusted-health-expectancy-a-new-summary-measure-of-population-health
#47
Magdalena Muszyńska-Spielauer, Marc Luy
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
February 28, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36821019/the-intergenerational-transmission-of-family-dissolution-how-it-varies-by-social-class-origin-and-birth-cohort
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alessandro Di Nallo, Daniel Oesch
Children from separated parents are more likely to also experience the dissolution of their own union. For many children, parental separation thus is an adverse life course event that follows them into adulthood. We examine whether parents' social class mitigates this adversity and weakens the intergenerational transmission of family dissolution for children from advantaged class origins. This is the case if separated parents with more resources are able to offer better living conditions to their children and keep them longer in education, reducing children's incentives for early home-leaving, early cohabitation and early childbearing-three life course choices that increase the risk of later family dissolution...
February 23, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36809371/double-disadvantage-in-a-nordic-welfare-state-a-demographic-analysis-of-the-single-parent-employment-gap-in-finland-1987-2018
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Juho Härkönen, Marika Jalovaara, Eevi Lappalainen, Anneli Miettinen
This study demonstrates how an evolving negative educational gradient of single parenthood can interact with changing labour market conditions to shape labour market inequalities between partnered and single parents. We analysed trends in employment rates among Finnish partnered and single mothers and fathers from 1987 to 2018. In the late 1980s' Finland, single mothers' employment was internationally high and on par with that of partnered mothers, and single fathers' employment rate was just below that of partnered fathers...
February 21, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36790655/the-association-between-religiosity-and-fertility-intentions-via-grandparenting-evidence-from-ggs-data
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charalampos Dantis, Ester Lucia Rizzi, Thomas Baudin
Although the literature concerning the association between religiosity and fertility in European countries is already quite extensive, studies exploring the mechanisms of action of religiosity are rare. The main aim of this article is to investigate whether grandparental childcare is a mediating or moderating variable in the association between attendance at religious services and the intention to have a second or third child. Building on previous literature, we assume that parents who are more religious might put more effort into establishing a positive relation with the grandparents of their child/children...
February 15, 2023: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853369/the-gendered-effects-of-divorce-on-mothers-and-fathers-time-with-children-and-children-s-developmental-activities-a-longitudinal-study
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tomás Cano, Pablo Gracia
How divorce influences parents' and children's time use has received very little scientific attention. This study uses high-quality longitudinal time-diary data across six waves from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children to examine how parental separation shapes parent-child time and children's daily activities. Results show that separation leads to a strong increase of gender inequalities in parents' time use. After separation, mother-child time doubles, two-parent time declines by three, and father-child time remains low...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853368/wedding-amidst-war-armed-conflict-and-female-teen-marriage-in-azerbaijan
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Orsola Torrisi
Does armed conflict influence female teen marriage? Despite increasing attention to early marriage, its drivers and consequences, quantitative research on whether teen unions are affected by situations of armed violence is minimal. This paper addresses this gap by examining the relationship between exposure to the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh over 1992-1996 and teen marriage outcomes in Azerbaijan. Using data from the 2006 Demographic and Health Survey and the Uppsala Conflict Data Program, I compare cohorts at risk of teen union before and during the conflict climax years with a modelling strategy that exploits information on forced displacement and spatial variation in conflict violence...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853367/the-decline-of-spanish-fertility-the-role-of-religion
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryohei Mogi, Albert Esteve, Vegard F Skirbekk
The Spanish total fertility rate declined from 2.8 to below 1.4 children per woman from 1975 to 2020. Spain is categorized as a "lowest-low fertility" country. Although there have been many attempts to explain the Spanish fertility decline, there has been an insufficient focus been given to religion. This brief report aims to analyse how religious affiliation, particularly being Catholics, associates with fertility behaviours-entering parenthood and the total number of children. Using three nationally representative surveys, we show that, compared with the religiously non-affiliated, Catholic women have a higher likelihood of entering parenthood after controlling for demographic, union status and educational characteristics...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853366/mortality-advantage-reversed-the-causes-of-death-driving-all-cause-mortality-differentials-between-immigrants-the-descendants-of-immigrants-and-ancestral-natives-in-sweden-1997-2016
#54
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew Wallace
A small but growing body of studies have documented the alarming mortality situation of adult descendants of migrants in a number of European countries. Nearly all of them have focused on all-cause mortality to reveal these important health inequalities. This paper takes advantage of the Swedish population registers to study all-cause and cause-specific mortality among men and women aged 15-44 in Sweden from 1997 to 2016 to a level of granularity unparalleled elsewhere. It adopts a multi-generation, multi-origin and multi-cause-of-death approach...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853365/disentangling-the-long-term-effects-of-divorce-circumstances-on-father-child-closeness-in-adulthood-a-mediation-analysis
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Juul Spaan, Ruben van Gaalen, Matthijs Kalmijn
Many studies have shown that the relationship between nonresidential fathers and their children in youth has a lasting influence on their relationship in adulthood. Comparatively less is known about the process through which divorce affects father-child relationships. We assess if and how the divorce circumstances of interparental conflict, the presence of new partners, and geographical distance between parents affect nonresidential father-child closeness in adulthood. Using a path model, we test whether father-adult child closeness is mediated by fathers' involvement after divorce...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853364/extreme-temperature-and-mortality-by-educational-attainment-in-spain-2012-2018
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Risto Conte Keivabu
Extreme temperatures are a threat to public health, increasing mortality in the affected population. Moreover, there is substantial research showing how age and gender shape vulnerabilities to this environmental risk. However, there is only limited knowledge on how socioeconomic status (SES), operationalized using educational attainment, stratifies the effect of extreme temperatures on mortality. Here, we address this link using Poisson regression and administrative data from 2012 to 2018 for 50 Spanish Provinces on individuals aged above 65 matched with meteorological data provided by the E-OBS dataset...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853363/how-social-capital-is-related-to-migration-between-communities
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
László Lőrincz, Brigitta Németh
In addition to economic and infrastructural factors, social connections of people also influence migration patterns. This influence can be attributed to the resources that are made available by social contacts: social capital, which can also be utilized in the process of migration. Based on previous literature, we identify three different aspects of social capital and test their relationship with domestic migration simultaneously. First, we analyse if the intensity of connections within communities (local social capital) restrains from migration...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853362/who-wants-to-become-italian-a-study-of-interest-in-naturalisation-among-foreign-migrants-in-italy
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elisa Barbiano di Belgiojoso, Livia Elisa Ortensi
Since the early 1990s, Italy, along with other countries situated at Europe's periphery, has become an attractive destination for migrants due to its lax regulation of migration and its job market. Despite its restrictive naturalisation laws, an increasing number of migrants are becoming eligible for Italian citizenship, which has led to a growing number of naturalisations in recent years. Existing research exploring naturalisation and its determinants has found migrants' ability to attain citizenship strongly depends on their interest in becoming a member of the host state, requirements (as defined by the host country), and their capacity to overcome various constraints such as the costs involved in the naturalisation process...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853361/non-intact-families-and-children-s-educational-outcomes-comparing-native-and-migrant-pupils
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Raffaele Guetto, Francesca Zanasi, Maria Carella
This study explores whether the association between living in a single-parent household and children's educational outcomes differs by migration background through comparing natives with first- and second-generation migrant pupils from different areas of origin. While there is strong evidence of an educational gap between migrant and native pupils in Western countries-and particularly in Italy-the interaction with family structure has been under-investigated. We suggest that native children have more socioeconomic resources to lose as a consequence of parental breakups, and thus may experience more negative consequences from living in a single-parent household compared to migrant children, who tend to have poorer educational outcomes regardless of family disruptions...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36853360/movers-and-stayers-a-study-of-emigration-from-sweden-1993-2014
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Debora Pricila Birgier, Christer Lundh, Yitchak Haberfeld, Erik Elldér
A standard proposition in the migration literature is that emigrants are not drawn randomly from their source population, but rather compose a self-selected group in terms of labour market characteristics. Such self-selection refers to observed characteristics, such as education, or occupation, as well as unobserved characteristics such as cognitive abilities. However, due to data limitations, most previous studies on selectivity have analysed immigrants' characteristics at destinations rather than using data from their source countries...
December 2022: European Journal of Population
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