4 research outputs found

    Fertility of immigrant women in Italy: outcomes from unconventional data

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    This paper contributes to the debate on the immigrant population’s reproductive behaviors using an unconventional survey not designed for demographic analysis. Applying the own-child method of young co-residing children, who are unlikely to have left home, we describe the patterns of the numbers of births realized after migration to women aged 15-40 years old and we look at the main determinants of fertility fitting a Poisson model. According to the literature, among immigrant women the migratory patterns , the gender roles and the country/area of origin represent important determinants of migrants’ fertility after migration, while the individual characteristics and destination contexts seem less important

    Fertility model and female labour force participation in selected ASEAN countries

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    This paper tends to investigate the ambiguous relationship between fertility and women’s labour force participation in the case of Malaysia and other selected Asian countries such as Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam.Using a panel of observations for the period 1995 to 2009, this study examines the correlation and panel causality effect between fertility rate, female labour force participation, and other fertility factors.The panel analysis was done on the six selected ASEAN countries (ASEAN-6), as well as for each of the individual country. This study found that there is mixed correlation between the regression variables in ASEAN countries but none of them have a strong correlation.The results on causality tests show that primary education, health expenditure, life expectancy at birth, labour participation rate, and self-employed - female do not granger-cause fertility rate in all six ASEAN countries.However there is a unidirectional causality which runs from fertility rate to education primary, life expectancy at birth and labour participation rate
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