Aufsatz(elektronisch)1. Mai 2012

Starting a Family at Your Parents' House: Multigenerational Households and Below Replacement Fertility in Urban Bulgaria

In: Journal of comparative family studies, Band 43, Heft 3, S. 439-459

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Abstract

In societies with strong multigenerational links, economic uncertainty results in choosing to stay with one child, sometimes in association with postponement of first births (i.e., Italy) and sometimes in early childbearing (i.e. Bulgaria). The differences in intergenerational family practices in lowest-low fertility contexts is likely to play a role on differences timing to parenthood. In this paper, we focus on the phenomenon of women who have or intend to have one child in their early twenties in Bulgaria and do not intend to have a second child. We argue that the key to this process is the persistence of extended multigenerational households in the Bulgarian context and their effect on young couples' fertility decision making. We use semi-structured interview data from the project Fertility Choices in Central and Eastern Europe and ethnographic fieldnotes. The interviews were collected from a sample of 22 couples resident in Sofia and representing different permutations of educational level, marital status and number of children (0 or 1). The ethnographic fieldwork was conducted in both rural and urban Bulgaria between 1997 and 2009 for a four-year period. Results suggest that as long as the economic situation remains dire, and young Bulgarians hopes for the future remain cynical, multigenerational households represent the accepted practice of entering into parenthood for young families.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)

ISSN: 1929-9850

DOI

10.3138/jcfs.43.3.439

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