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Brita J. Fosse; Jane M. Tram; Ravneet K. Dhaliwal; Crystal C. Webb; Emily Kearns – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2024
Women seeking higher education frequently do so during peak childbearing years and women with higher levels of education are more likely to postpone motherhood until a later age. Fertility rate, defined as the average number of children born to a woman over her lifetime, has decreased globally. The decrease in birthrate has been partially…
Descriptors: Females, Graduate Students, Psychology, Behavioral Sciences
Jie Wang; Hideo Akabayashi; Masayuki Kobayashi; Shinpei Sano – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Since the late 1990s, the number of college student loan debtors has increased rapidly in Japan. Despite the uniqueness of Japanese higher education policies in terms of tuition levels and heavy reliance on educational loans rather than grants, few studies have focused on the influence of student loans on adult youths' lives. This study is the…
Descriptors: Student Loan Programs, Debt (Financial), Foreign Countries, Educational Policy
UNICEF, 2025
In the three decades since the 1995 Beijing Platform for Action was endorsed by 189 countries, remarkable gains have been made for adolescent girls across key domains--from rising school completion rates to legal reforms that strengthen their rights, to reductions in the number of adolescent girls giving birth. Yet, glaring gaps remain: nearly 1…
Descriptors: Females, Womens Education, Gender Issues, Foreign Countries
Sawhill, Isabel; Venator, Joanna – Center on Children and Families at Brookings, 2015
Non-marital childbearing is associated with many adverse outcomes for both the mother and the child. Most of these births are unintended. If these unintended births could be reduced it might improve children's prospects by enabling their mothers to get more education, earn more, and wait to have children within marriage. In this brief, the authors…
Descriptors: Family Planning, Children, Child Development, Quality of Life
Lezhnina, Iu. P. – Russian Education and Society, 2011
Russia's declining birth rate is linked to a delay in a family's decision to have children and to uncertainty about the place of children in a couple's relationship. Despite the rise of individualism and the importance of career and self-realization, however, the family retains a very important place in Russian society. (Contains 1 table, 1…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Foreign Countries, Family Planning, Family Relationship
Kearney, Melissa Schettini; Levine, Phillip B. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2012
We investigate possible explanations for the large decline in U.S. teen childbearing that occurred in the twenty years following the 1991 peak. Our review of previous evidence and the results of new analyses presented here leads to the following main set of observations. First, the observed decline in teen childbearing is even more surprising…
Descriptors: Family Planning, Sex Education, Birth Rate, Labor Market
Lopoo, Leonard M.; Raissian, Kerri M. – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2012
This retrospective reviews the policies that affect the fertility of American women, both policies designed to alter fertility intentionally as well as those that change childbearing unintentionally. Becker's seminal work on the economics of fertility serves as the theoretical foundation for this literature. After describing Becker's economic…
Descriptors: Family Planning, Public Policy, Females, Birth Rate
Myers, Scott M. – Journal of Family Issues, 2010
Having a child is a major determinant of geographic mobility. Little is known, however, about the opposite process--whether geographic mobility is a determinant of fertility. Drawing on social and human capital theories and research on fertility and migration to develop competing hypotheses, the author examines the effects of mobility on changes…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Migration, Social Capital, Birth Rate
OECD Publishing (NJ3), 2011
All OECD governments want to give parents more choice in their work and family decisions. This book looks at the different ways in which governments support families. It seeks to provide answers to questions like: Is spending on family benefits going up, and how does it vary by the age of the child? Has the crisis affected public support for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Birth Rate, Family Structure, Age Differences
Lauster, Nathanael; Allan, Graham – University of British Columbia Press, 2011
Fertility rates have fallen dramatically around the world. In some countries, there are no longer enough children being born to replace adult populations. The disappearance of children is a matter of concern matched only by fears that childhood is becoming too structured or not structured enough, too short or too long, or just simply too different…
Descriptors: Investigations, Demography, Anthropology, Prediction

Sweet, James A. – Family Planning Perspectives, 1974
An analysis of the continuous decline in fertility in the United States since 1957 shows that it has been most pronounced and most rapid among those groups which previously had the highest fertility--blacks, American Indians, and Mexican Americans. Among urban whites, fertility decline has been heavily concentrated among those of low income. (EH)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Family Planning, Population Trends, Racial Differences

Chow, L. P.; And Others – American Journal of Public Health, 1987
Women who dropped out of family planning clinic services in Maryland used contraceptives for a considerable time beyond their last visit. However, unplanned pregnancies occurred, suggesting that contraceptive use was either inconsistent or ineffective. Thus, education and counseling must be systematic and effective during the first clinic visit.…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Clinics, Contraception, Dropouts
Bulatao, Rodolfo A. – 1998
This book provides an overview of family planning and fertility in the United States, from the number of babies women have to the risks they face in having them and the measures they choose to avoid pregnancy, to the dollars that would be saved with fewer unwanted pregnancies. Based on the social science literature through mid-1997, which is cited…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Contraception, Family Planning, Social Science Research

Jaffe, Frederick S. – Family Planning Perspectives, 1974
Demonstrates a decline in fertility among low and marginal income women. Policy implications for the organization of family planning programs are discussed. (EH)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Family Planning, Low Income Groups, Population Trends
Stansfield, Elaine – Humanist, 1984
Utah is the fastest growing state in the United States because its birthrate is the highest. The parenthood compulsion is a Mormon ethic, equivalent almost to the Catholic mandate. (RM)
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Family Planning, Overpopulation, Population Growth