2016
DOI: 10.3224/zff.v28i3.26044
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Gegen den Mainstream – Leitbilder zu Kinderlosigkeit und Kinderreichtum zur Erklärung der Abweichung von der Zweikindnorm

Abstract: Against the mainstream: Cultural conceptions of childlessness and large families to explain a deviation from the two-child family Zusammenfassung Seit Jahrzehnten dominiert in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland das Leitbild der Zweikindfamilie. Dennoch gibt es Menschen, die von diesem Mainstream abweichen: Sie entscheiden sich bewusst gegen Kinder, für ein Einzelkind oder aber für drei oder mehr Kinder. Solche Paritätsunterschiede werden seit langem untersucht, jedoch selten unter Einbezug kultureller Vorstellunge… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Declining family sizes and, in particular, fewer women having a third child, are principal causes of overall fertility decline worldwide (Zeman et al 2018). Research on higher parity birth progressions is thus once more a focus of attention in several countries, such as France (Breton et al 2005), Germany (Diabaté/Ruckdeschel 2016), and Turkey (Greulich et al 2016). The link between the declining number of three-child families and declining total fertility rates has traditionally been considered important in Norway (Kravdal 1992), and while the number of large families is falling, almost half of the Norwegian ISSP respondents in 2012 continue to regard three or more children as the ideal number for a family (ISSP Research Group 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Declining family sizes and, in particular, fewer women having a third child, are principal causes of overall fertility decline worldwide (Zeman et al 2018). Research on higher parity birth progressions is thus once more a focus of attention in several countries, such as France (Breton et al 2005), Germany (Diabaté/Ruckdeschel 2016), and Turkey (Greulich et al 2016). The link between the declining number of three-child families and declining total fertility rates has traditionally been considered important in Norway (Kravdal 1992), and while the number of large families is falling, almost half of the Norwegian ISSP respondents in 2012 continue to regard three or more children as the ideal number for a family (ISSP Research Group 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%