Batyra Ewa, Pesando Luca Maria, Castro Andrés F, Furstenberg Frank F, Kohler Hans-Peter
Center for Demographic Studies (CED-CERCA), Carrer de Ca n'Altayó, Edifici E2, 08193, Barcelona, Spain.
Division of Social Science, New York University Abu Dhabi.
Popul Space Place. 2023 Jul;29(5). doi: 10.1002/psp.2661. Epub 2023 Apr 18.
Studies on global changes in families have greatly increased over the past decade, adopting both a country-specific and, more recently, a cross-national comparative perspective. While most studies are focused on the drivers of global changes in families, little comparative research has explored the implications of family processes for the health and well-being of children. This study aims to fill this gap and launch a new research agenda exploring the intergenerational implications of union-formation and within-couple dynamics for children's health and well-being across low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), both globally, regionally, and by the stage of fertility transition. We do so by adopting a macro-level perspective and a conceptualization of children's outcomes - health at birth, health in later life, and schooling - and leveraging Demographic and Health Survey and World Bank data across 75 LMICs. Our results show that in societies where partnerships are characterized by more equal status between spouses - i.e., where the age range between spouses and differences in years of schooling between partners are narrower - children fare better on several outcomes. These associations are particularly strong in mid- and high-fertility settings. Despite a series of regularities, our results also highlight a set of findings whereby, at a macro-level, the prevalence of marriage and divorce/separation are not invariably associated with children's outcomes, especially in LMICs where fertility is comparatively lower. We document little cross-regional heterogeneity, primarily highlighting the centrality of demographic factors such as age vis-à-vis, for instance, region-specific characteristics that are more tied to the social fabric of specific societies.
在过去十年中,关于家庭全球变化的研究大幅增加,采用了特定国家以及最近的跨国比较视角。虽然大多数研究聚焦于家庭全球变化的驱动因素,但很少有比较研究探讨家庭过程对儿童健康和福祉的影响。本研究旨在填补这一空白,并启动一项新的研究议程,探讨在全球、区域以及生育转型阶段,低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)中婚姻组建和夫妻关系动态对儿童健康和福祉的代际影响。我们通过采用宏观层面的视角以及对儿童结局(出生时的健康、晚年的健康和受教育程度)的概念化,并利用75个低收入和中等收入国家的人口与健康调查以及世界银行的数据来开展研究。我们的结果表明,在配偶地位更为平等的社会中——即配偶年龄差距和受教育年限差异较小的社会——儿童在多个结局方面表现更好。这些关联在中高生育率环境中尤为明显。尽管存在一系列规律,但我们的结果也突出了一组发现,即在宏观层面,婚姻和离婚/分居的发生率并不总是与儿童结局相关,特别是在生育率相对较低的低收入和中等收入国家。我们记录到很少有跨区域异质性,主要强调诸如年龄等人口因素的核心地位,而相对于更与特定社会的社会结构相关的区域特定特征而言。