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The Path to Replacement Fertility in Egypt: Acceptance, Preference, and Achievement

This study draws upon data from the 2004 Slow Fertility Transition survey, a follow-up to the 2003 Egypt Interim Demographic and Health Survey, to investigate obstacles to achieving replacement fertility. To account for the likelihood of embracing the two-child ideal, the analysis adopts a framework...

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Published in:Studies in family planning 2008-09, Vol.39 (3), p.161-176
Main Author: Zeini, Laila O. El
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Language:English
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description This study draws upon data from the 2004 Slow Fertility Transition survey, a follow-up to the 2003 Egypt Interim Demographic and Health Survey, to investigate obstacles to achieving replacement fertility. To account for the likelihood of embracing the two-child ideal, the analysis adopts a framework with the acronym APA: Acceptance of the two-child ideal, Preference for that ideal, and Achievement of that preference. The framework posits a hierarchy among the three and hypothesizes that each depends on a set of factors, including gender stratification, economic expectations, perception of the costs and benefits of having children, and the costs of fertility regulation. The results indicate that son preference and the perceived low cost of childrearing are major obstacles to the acceptance of the two-child family. Son preference, other discriminatory gender attitudes, optimistic economic expectations, and fear of contraceptive side effects are associated with a low preference for and ambivalence about having only two children. Given a decisive preference, lower socioeconomic status and strong son preference are the major obstacles to the achievement of the two-child ideal.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); EconLit with Full Text; Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; PAIS Index; JSTOR Archival Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Attitudes
Behavior
Birth Control
Children
Cultural values
Demographics
Demography
Economic costs and benefits
Economic expectations
Economic Factors
Egypt
Family Characteristics
Family planning
Family Planning Policy
Family Planning Services
Family studies
Female
Female fertility
Fertility
Gender studies
Goals
Health Surveys
Hierarchy
Humans
Ideal numbers
Male
Models, Theoretical
Perceptions
Regulation
Side effects
Social Class
Socioeconomic Status
Sons
Surveys
title The Path to Replacement Fertility in Egypt: Acceptance, Preference, and Achievement
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