Role of conflict in shaping fertility preferences in Rwanda

Type Journal Article - Etude de la Population Africaine
Title Role of conflict in shaping fertility preferences in Rwanda
Author(s)
Volume 27
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 105-117
URL http://search.proquest.com/openview/b03bcc8ab24d63e11672d8ee1b3c84bd/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=2031​869
Abstract
Conflicts affect the social and economic conditions that could account for the stall in fertility decline
in sub-Saharan Africa. In Rwanda the total fertility rate decreased very rapidly to 6.1 in the eighties
but stalled at that level in the nineties. Part of the stall can be attributed to a lack of fertility control,
but the question is whether social upheaval also affects fertility preferences. We identify three
mechanisms through which the Rwanda conflict has led to a preference for larger families: mortality
experience, modernization, the attitudes of third parties.
Using data from DHS, we tested the contribution of these mechanisms to the preference for small,
medium or large families. With the exception of sibling mortality, there is a strong impact by these
mechanisms on the preference for large families, yet they do not fully account for the shifts in preferences
over the years

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