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Título
Fertility of immigrants and their descendants in Spain: intergenerational convergence to the native population’s behaviour?
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
fertility, migration, immigrant descendants, education, female employment, Spain
Fertility
Migration
Immigran descendants
Education
Female employment
Spain
Clasificación UNESCO
63 Sociología
Fecha de publicación
2023
Editor
Oxford University Press
Citación
García Gómez, J., Del Rey Poveda, A., & Stanek Baranowski, M. A. (2023). Fertility of immigrants and their descendants in Spain: Intergenerational convergence to the native population’s behaviour? Migration Studies, 11(4), 669-693. https://doi.org/10.1093/MIGRATION/MNAD025
Resumen
[EN] We study the fertility patterns of first, 1.5, and second-generation immigrants in Spain, analysing a database linking the 2012–15 birth registers to the 2011 census. While first-generation Latin American immigrants have a lower fertility level than the native population, the 1.5 generation arriving between the ages of 9 and 17 years have a higher level. Both the 1.5 generation arriving younger than 9 years and the second generation closely follow the native population’s fertility level. The first and 1.5 generations of Maghrebi immigrants have a much higher fertility level than the native population, and the second generation maintains a slightly higher level. The impact that age, labour market participation, and educational attainment have on the second generation’s level is closer to the Spanish population than among the first generation. Selection and disruption hypotheses help to explain the fertility of Latin American immigrants, while socialization and interrelation of events hypotheses do so for Maghrebi immigrants.
URI
ISSN
2049-5838
DOI
10.1093/migration/mnad025
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