2005
DOI: 10.1007/s11113-005-0367-y
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Urbanization and the fertility transition in Ghana

Abstract: This paper examines the way in which migration and urban residence operate to alter fertility outcomes. While urban-rural fertility differentials have long been established for most developing societies, the nature of these differences among migrants and between migrants and those of succeeding generations is not well understood. The evidence presented here suggests that rural-urban migration and urbanization may contribute positively to processes of fertility transition. Using data from the 1998 Kumasi Peri-U… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…This is due to fluctuation in infant mortality rate [15][16][17][18]. Similar pattern may also be observed in Matlab HDSS in last decades; IMR fluctuated for several times, which is also reflected in the difference of e 0 and e 1 .…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 58%
“…This is due to fluctuation in infant mortality rate [15][16][17][18]. Similar pattern may also be observed in Matlab HDSS in last decades; IMR fluctuated for several times, which is also reflected in the difference of e 0 and e 1 .…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 58%
“…A substantial body of accumulated research based on census and survey data links migration with fertility and family maintenance (Goldstein and Goldstein 1981, Stephen and Bean 1992, Brockerhoff and Yang 1994, White et al 2005. Some studies have considered the impact of migration on fertility Pol 1985, Jensen andAhlburg 2004) and the impact of fertility on migration (White, Moreno, andGuo 1995, Yang 2000), as well as the presence of a non-causal association between the two, rooted in their shared association with other factors that influence both outcomes (Macisco, Weller and Bouvier 1969, Ribe and Schultz 1980, Schultz 1988.…”
Section: Migration and Fertilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For our purposes, the implications would be that if city-bound migrants are selected for lower fertility, their five-year fertility rates following migration should be similar to those already living in the city (Chattopadhyay, White and Debpuur 2006;White et al 2005). Alternatively, if lower migrant fertility is mainly driven by assimilation, which occurs over time, and disruptions associated with the move alongside a possible rebound following their arrival might imply that their fertility levels should be closer to the higher rural rates (Jensen and Ahlburg 2004).…”
Section: Examining Urban and Rural Fertility Assumptionsmentioning
confidence: 99%