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Entrance into parenthood at the onset of low fertility in Ukraine: The role of family relationships and perceived security

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-29, 15:34 authored by Yuliya Hilevych
<p>BACKGROUND In post-Soviet countries, low fertility has been achieved through postponement of second birth, while entrance into parenthood still takes place relatively early in life and within marriage. Studies suggest that grandparental support with childcare drives this reproductive behaviour. However, we still know little about the exact way in which decisions about first parenthood are shaped by family relationships, especially with respect to the expected and actual support they exert. OBJECTIVE This paper explores how family relationships – spousal and intergenerational – influenced decisions to enter parenthood in Ukraine between 1950 and 1975, when fertility there declined below the replacement level for the first time. METHODS A total of 66 qualitative life-history interviews were conducted with women and men from the Ukrainian cities of Lviv (west) and Kharkiv (east); age-specific fertility rates and the total fertility rate in 1960 were measured for the two provinces. RESULTS The informants shared their notions about the right timing for first parenthood, which parents(-in-law) helped them to navigate. This guidance, in turn, created expectations about the provision of help with childcare, which facilitated a feeling of security when entering parenthood in economically insecure circumstances, which are defined as perceived security. The actual provision of childcare by parents(-in-law), however, was contingent on spousal relationships, which differed between the two cities. These differences are important for understanding postponement of second birth and regional variation in achieving low fertility in Ukraine.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Social and Political Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Demographic Research

Volume

42

Pages/Article Number

799-826

Publisher

Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research

ISSN

1435-9871

Date Submitted

2020-08-11

Date Accepted

2020-05-06

Date of First Publication

2020-05-06

Date of Final Publication

2020-05-06

Date Document First Uploaded

2020-07-30

ePrints ID

41671

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