2012
DOI: 10.1162/jinh_a_00306
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Migrants and the Diffusion of Low Marital Fertility in Belgium

Abstract: Although the diffusion of fertility behavior between different social strata in historical communities has received considerable attention in recent studies, the relationship between the diffusion of fertility behavior and the diffusion of people (migration) during the nineteenth century remains largely underexplored. Evidence from population registers compiled in the Historical Database of the Liège Region, covering the period of 1812 to 1900, reveals that migrant couples in Sart, Belgium, from 1850 to 1874 a… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…As discussed earlier, we believe that it could be a proxy for social connectedness through space and local social embeddedness. Migrants living far from their birthplace might have had better access to nonlocal sources of information (Szreter 1996) given that they frequently maintained contact with family and friends in their former places of residence (Creighton et al 2012). In addition, they may have been less embedded in local social and family control networks.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As discussed earlier, we believe that it could be a proxy for social connectedness through space and local social embeddedness. Migrants living far from their birthplace might have had better access to nonlocal sources of information (Szreter 1996) given that they frequently maintained contact with family and friends in their former places of residence (Creighton et al 2012). In addition, they may have been less embedded in local social and family control networks.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Elite women also might have been less embedded in local social control networks (Lesthaeghe 1980) for several reasons. First, many elite women were not living close to their place of birth (see upcoming Analytical Strategy section), and may therefore have been less subject to control by other family members (see also Creighton et al 2012). The situation was very different for women in farm families, whose lives were generally more focused on the area in which they were born (Klüsener et al 2017).…”
Section: Theoretical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fertility decisions of city dwellers were possibly less influenced by the pressures of family, members of the older generation, and their home community to have larger families. Migration may also be correlated to fertility through co-determination by an unmeasured variable: migrants are likely to be selective of the more enterprising, ambitious, and open-to-innovation among members of the community they leave (Creighton et al 2012 ). These characteristics may produce both longer-distance migration and a willingness to adopt new fertility-controlling strategies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These characteristics may produce both longer-distance migration and a willingness to adopt new fertility-controlling strategies. However, the disruptive nature of migration, coupled with the difficulties of integrating into a new environment, may have also left migrants disinclined to have large families, particularly when they had no local or familial support networks in their new place of residence (Creighton et al 2012 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, servants should also be considered as a very particular group of migrants (Piette, 2000). Migrants have received little attention in fertility studies (Creighton, Matthys, & Quaranta, 2012). The few studies that did account for migrants' fertility took the point of view of the receiving context, investigating how immigrants adapted to the fertility regime in their destination.…”
Section: Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%