Hopes,dreams and anxieties: India's one-child families |
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Authors: | Alaka M Basu Sonalde Desai |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Development Sociology, Cornell University, 240 Warren Hall, 137 Reservoir Avenue, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA;2. Department of Sociology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742-1315, USA |
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Abstract: | While rapid fertility decline in India in the last two decades has received considerable attention, much of the discourse has focused on a decline in high parity births. However, this paper finds that, almost hidden from the public gaze, a small but significant segment of the Indian population has begun the transition to extremely low fertility. Among the urban, upper income, educated, middle class, it is no longer unusual to find families stopping at one child, even when this child is a girl. Using data from the India Human Development Survey of 2004–2005, we examine the factors that may lead some families to stop at a single child. We conclude that the motivations for this very low fertility are likely to be a more extreme form of those for low fertility rather than reflecting the qualitative change in ideologies and worldviews that is hypothesized to accompany very low fertility during the second demographic transition. |
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Keywords: | India low fertility middle class demographic transition education |
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