Bibliographies
The following bibliography has been compiled from the Australian Family & Society Abstracts database and other resources held in the Institute's library. Where available a link to the document on the Web is provided. Most items can be borrowed from the Institute's library via the inter library loan system. Online publications in PDF format require Adobe Acrobat Reader.
Having children
A child to call my own: a study of adopted women and their
experience of motherhood.
Masso, P; Whitfield, V
Bondi, NSW: The Benevolent Society, 2003, 64p, figures
This
research was conducted with 190 adopted women to explore how adoption is
related to pregnancy, birth and motherhood, and how becoming a mother
impacts on adopted women's views of adoption and their family
relationships. This report covers the project methodology and information
about the participants. Discussion of the findings is in two parts:
adopted women with no children; and adopted women with children. The
authors explore the women's desire to have or not have children, the
effect of adoption on this decision, the impact on relationships, the
decision to make contact, the experience of having children, and the
changing importance of adoption.
Absent, recalcitrant (or is it oppressed?) men: getting to the root of
Australian's fertility decline.
Cannold, Leslie
In: Population and society: issues, research, policy: Australian
Population Association 12th Biennial Conference, 15-17 September 2004,
Canberra. Canberra, ACT: ACSPRI Centre for Social Research, Australian
National University, 2004, 13p, Online only (PDF 305K)
The
high incidence of absent or recalcitrant men and family unfriendly
workplaces are both central to an explanation of rising rates of
'circumstantial childlessness', this paper says. It reports on a study
that featured in depth interviews with 35 women in their fertile years
but without children in an attempt to explore their desires and
intentions regarding motherhood. The paper considers the relative
contributions of work family constraints and partnering difficulties to
Australia's declining rates of fertility. The study sorted women into
basic orientations towards motherhood: thwarted mothers, whose commitment
is usually formed early and is strong and internally sourced; waiters and
watchers, who are ambivalent and undecided about parenting; and women
childless by relationship, who will not leave a relationship with a
partner who refuses to have kids. The paper discusses the role of men in
women's fertility decisions.
Australia's infertility crisis.
Allen,
Kerrie
Australian Family v.26 no.2 Jul 2005: 24-35
What
are the determinants of declining fertility in Australia? This article
explores: biological determinants; environmental determinants, including
the taxation system, housing costs, the availability of contraception and
abortion, and the economy; social determinants, including
underemployment, declining marriage rates, work, low income, social
attitudes, feminism, education, societal views of motherhood,
individualism, social change, cohabitation, homosexual unions,
contraceptive mentality; and psychological determinants.
Bringing baby home.
Lacey, Denise
Threshold no.86 Mar 2006: 30-31
The birth of a child has an
enormous effect on a relationship. This article explores ways that the
transition to parenting can be made successfully. It summarises the key
points in the Bringing Baby Home program and gives examples of activities
from the program that marriage educators can explore with clients.
Children? No children? Effects of changing personal relationships on
decisions about having children.
Qu, L; Weston, R;
Kilmartin, C
Family Matters no.57 Spring - Summer 2000: 14-19, and
Online (PDF 604K)
The current decline in family size in
Australia has sparked considerable debate. Having children is usually
seen as a matter of choice, but external circumstances may place
constraints on this choice. What is the impact of relationship status on
men's and women's intentions about whether or not to have children? And
how do changes in relationship status affect those intentions? Based on
data from the Australian Family Formation Project, the analysis in this
paper focuses on intentions and outcomes regarding having children,
covering nearly a decade. Three issues are examined: the prevalence of
intentions to have children or remain childless among men and women when
they were first contacted (1981); whether those who did not intend to
have children were less likely to change their minds than those who
intended to have children; and the extent to which relationship status
and changes in relationship status over the next ten years influenced
intentions and outcomes.
Comparative study of partners' fertility desires and
intentions.
Tesfaghiorghis, Habtemariam
In:
Australian Social Policy Conference 2005. Sydney, NSW: Social Policy
Research Centre, 2005, 22p, Online only (PDF 228K)
Based on
primary analysis of the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in
Australia (HILDA) Survey Waves 1-2 datasets, this paper examines
partners' future fertility desires and intentions. The purposes of the
paper are to: analyse women and partners' achieved fertility; undertake a
comparative study of partners' future fertility desires, expectations and
intentions by examining differences according to such variables as
partners' age and number of children ever born; analyse whether women and
partners fertility desires, expectations and intentions are congruent;
estimate completed fertility rate and childlessness for women and
partners with incomplete fertility; and analyse data on women and
partners who intended to have children (or more children) by when they
intended to have a child or the next child.
Dashed
hopes? Fertility aspirations and expectations
compared.
Weston, Ruth; Qu, Lixia
Family
Matters no.69 Spring - Summer 2004: 10-17, and Online
(PDF 464K)
Australia's fertility rate is currently below replacement
level, with women having fewer than two children on
average. In this article, which is part of the Fertility
Decision Making Project, the authors question whether
this trend reflects what people really want, and examine
the number of children that people wanted to have and
the number they expected. It was found that most men
and women wanted two or more children, and that people
on average wanted more children than they expected
to have. Despite these general trends most individual
men and women felt they already had or would have the
number of children they wanted.
Do we need a normative account of the decision to
parent?
Cannold, L
Melbourne, Vic: Centre for
Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, 2002, 26p (CAPPE Working Paper
2002/4), Online (PDF 70K)
The research that forms the basis
of this paper comprised extended interviews with 35 fertile childless /
childfree Australian and North American women, aged 28 to 42. The author
explains that, while most women endorsed and expanded on longstanding
normative prescriptions for how a 'good' mother ought to feel and behave,
they were at a loss to explain why a woman should decide to mother in the
first place. For several women, this difficulty led them to conclude that
a decision to have a child was 'irrational.' The author argues that
applied philosophers bear some causal and moral responsibility for
women's negative conclusions about the rationality of deciding to mother
and are obligated to respond to these findings by beginning work on
normative accounts of the decision to parent. Suggestions are made about
what such accounts should include, and avoid, to ensure relevance to
women and acceptability to both feminist and non-feminist
philosophers.
Does
child gender affect marital status?
Leigh, Andrew
Canberra, ACT: Centre for Economic Policy Research, Australian
National University, 2006, 28p, tables, figures (CEPR discussion paper
no.526), Online (PDF 305K)
The author explored the
relationship between child gender and decision to marry or divorce by
pooling microdata from five Australian censuses. By contrast with the
United States, he found no evidence that the gender of the first child
has a significant impact on the decision to marry or divorce. However,
among two-child families, parents with two children of the same sex are
1.7 percentage points less likely to be married than parents with a boy
and a girl. Surveys of parental attitudes suggest that this effect is
more likely to be driven by fathers than by mothers. This finding is not
consistent with theories of preference for sons over daughters,
differential costs, role models or complementary costs, but is consistent
with a theory of parity preference. (Author abstract, edited)
Ex-nuptial children in Australia: an empirical
analysis of nonmarital births.
de Vaus, David A
Journal of Family Studies v.11 no.1 Apr 2005: 36-44
The tight link between childbearing and being married
has substantially unraveled in recent decades. This
paper documents the extent to which this unraveling
has occurred in Australia. It examines current levels
of ex-nuptial births and the steep increase in such
births. The link between ex-nuptial births on the one
hand and maternal age and ethnicity on the other are
explored. Accompanying the rise in ex-nuptial births
has been a rise in loneparent families. The paper examines
the extent to which this rise is due to parental separation
and the extent to which it is due to unpartnered mothers
having children. The paper also explores whether children
born to cohabiting but unmarried parents experience
a greater rate of parental separation than do those
born to married parents. Data are also provided that
suggest that the sharp rise in ex-nuptial births has
taken place within a social context in which such births
are increasingly accepted. (Journal abstract)
Having children: the actual versus the ideal and
expected. new
Weston, Ruth; Qu, Lixia
In: Families
Matter: 9th Australian Institute of Family Studies Conference, Melbourne,
February 2005 - proceedings. Melbourne, Vic: Australian Institute of
Family Studies, 2005, 26p, Online only (Powerpoint presentation in PDF
format 1.23MB)
The Fertility Decision Making Project involved
computer assisted telephone interviews with a national random sample of
3201 people aged 20-39 years. It examined repondents' aspirations,
expectations and ideals as related to the question of whether to have
children, or not. This presentation examines the stability of aspirations
and expectations from wave 1 to wave 2 (taking into account pregnancies
or births during the interval), and assesses the strength of links
between aspirations and expectations of each partner in couples.
Having children or not.
Weston, Ruth
Family
Matters no.69 Spring - Summer 2004: 4-9, and Online (PDF 261K)
Australia's fertility rate is at an all time low and is well below
replacement level. In this article the author summarises some of the
arguments that have been put forward to explain what might shape people's
hopes, expectations and family decisions. The factors explaining the
fall in fertility include broad technological, structural, cultural and
social changes, shifting pathways of friends, changes in personal
financial circumstances and shifts in the beliefs and values of
prospective parents, with one of the most fundamental being postponement
of first births and consequent shortened childbearing years, and
increased risk of having no children at all. These factors are complex
and often mutually reinforcing. The Fertility Decision Making Project
has been designed to examine ways in which some of the potential broad
social forces may be translated into the decisions individuals make about
having children and to enhance understanding of the reasons underlying
fertility decisions of men and women.
Higher education, the bane
of fertility? An investigation with the HILDA Survey.
Yu, Peng
In: HILDA Survey Research Conference 2005: papers.
Parkville, Vic: Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social
Research, University of Melbourne, 2005, 54p, tables, Online (PDF
193K)
Using data from Wave 1 of the Household Income and
Labour Dynamics in Australia (HILDA) Survey, this paper analyses the
determinants of fertility, focusing on the role of education. The
analysis first models total intended lifetime fertility as a function of
education and other variables reflecting the opportunity costs and
consumption elements of child rearing. The results show that education
lowers total lifetime fertility. A second set of estimations concerns
determinants of the expected future number of children, showing that
people with higher education have higher fertility expectations. The
juxtaposition of these two sets of results may indicated that education
per se does not lower fertility expectations, but the more educated tend
to defer their fertility and other constraints such as relationship
breakdown may then result in fewer children. Other factors shown to
influence family size were: household income, partnering, religion, and
values concerning motherhood.
I think we should only have two: men and fertility
decision-making.
Singleton, Andrew
Just Policy no.36
Jun 2005: 29-34
How are men implicated in fertility decision
making in Australia? This article reports data from qualitative
interviews with 14 Australian men. It discusses: men's issues in deciding
about children, including deciding when to have the first child and how
many children to have; how much say men have; and policy issues.
It's not for lack of wanting kids... A report on the Fertility Decision
Making Project.
Weston, Ruth; Qu, Lixia; Parker,
Robyn; Alexander, Michael
Melbourne, Vic: Australian Institute of
Family Studies, 2004, 208p, tables, figures, (Research report no.11), and
Online
Australia's fertility rate has fallen dramatically
since the 1960s. It is now at an all-time low and well below replacement
level. Unless this decline in fertility is stemmed, Australia will face
not only an ageing population but also one whose numbers diminish. This
report attempts to gain an understanding of the reasons for fertility
trends, at both the macro and micro levels. It reports the findings of
the Fertility Decision Making Project, commissioned by the Federal Office
for Women, and provides indepth analyses of the aspirations, expectations
and ideals of Australians as related to the question of whether to have
children, or not. Particular attention is given to the ways in which
views on having children vary according to age, gender, parenting status,
relationship status, educational level, and employment status. The
aspirations examined included the family size respondents considered to
be personally ideal; whether or not they wanted a first or additional
child in the future; whether or not those aged 22 or more had changed
their family size preferences since they were 20 years old, and reasons
for any change; the reasons leading some of the childless respondents to
prefer not to have children; and views about the ideal age for the
respondents themselves to start, or to have started, a family.
Respondents were also asked to indicate how likely it was that they would
have a child in the future. The report concludes that, in short,
governments need to use a combination of approaches that is based on the
recognition that the low fertility rate is not due to a 'lack of wanting
children'.
Low fertility among women graduates.
Franklin, James; Tueno, Sarah Chee
People and Place v.12 no.1 2004:
38-45, figure, and Online (PDF 180K)
Australian women who are
university graduates have fewer children than non-graduates. In most
cases this appears to be the result of circumstantial pressures not
preference. Long years of study fill the most fertile years of women
students and new graduates need further time to establish their careers.
The chance of medical infertility increases with age so, for some, this
means that childbearing is not postponed but ruled out. Graduates who do
make the transition from university to professional work find that
working hours are long and that professional occupations are now both
highly demanding and insecure. Women who take time off to care for young
children must depend on one insecure income (their partner's) rather than
two, and their return to work is uncertain. These difficulties of time,
money and insecurity are compounded by problems in finding a suitable
partner. They are magnified by the enduring tendency of women to marry
up. Thus it can be more difficult for women graduates to find husbands
than it is for women who are non-graduates. (Journal abstract)
Men's and women's reasons for not having children.
Weston, R; Qu, L
Family Matters no.58 Autumn 2001: 10-15, tables,
and Online (PDF 457K)
Increasingly, men and women are
deciding against starting families. The resulting ageing of the
population has major implications for social policy. What reasons are
people giving for not having children? Have the reasons changed since
the early 1980s, and do these differ according to age? These issues are
explored in this article drawing on data from two surveys conducted by
the Australian Institute of Family Studies 15 years apart - the
Australian Family Formation Study conducted in 1981 and the Australian
Life Course Study conducted in 1996.
Oh no, we forgot to have children! How declining birth rates
are reshaping our society.
Macken, Deirdre
Crows
Nest, NSW: Allen and Unwin, 2005, 224p
In this book the
author explores the reasons why women have or don't have children. The
author acknowledges that some women do not get to make a choice.
However, she suggests that the same trends that provide women with
choices - biological technology, economic freedom and wider roles in
society - sometimes conspire to distract or discourage women from the
idea of motherhood. In her words, 'One day some of them will turn around
and say, oh no, I forgot to have children.' The author has aimed to cover
the social, cultural, political, economic, historic and philosophical
factors that influence a woman's choices.
Parity progression in Australia: what role does sex of
existing children play?
Gray, Edith; Evans, Ann
Australian Journal of Social Issues v.40 no.4 Summer 2005: 505-520,
tables, figure
In countries with low fertility regimes,
researchers are focusing on what factors influence higher levels of
parity and parity progression. This paper examines the impact of sex of
existing children on parity progression in Australia. There are two
dominant theoretical propositions about the effect of sex of existing
children. Firstly, sex of existing children is more important in
low-fertility societies than under high-fertility regimes in explaining
parity progression, while secondly that sex of existing children is less
important in societies with an egalitarian gender system. We model what
effect sex of existing children has on progressing to a second and third
child by analysing data from a nationally representative survey from
Australia (Negotiating the Life Course), and consider the two theoretical
positions. Other factors considered include continuity of relationship,
educational background and religiosity. We find that sex of children has
some impact on explaining parity progression in Australia, particularly
for recent cohorts of childbearing women, but suggest that qualitative
research would be useful in understanding why parents want both sons and
daughters in Australia. (Journal abstract)
Partnering and fertility patterns:
analysis of the HILDA Survey, Wave 1.
Fisher, K;
Charnock, D
In: HILDA Conference 2003. Melbourne, Vic: Melbourne
Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, 2003, 38p, tables,
Online only (PDF 1645K)
In 2000 the total fertility rate
(TFR) was the lowest on Australian record at 1.7 children per woman. The
HILDA dataset provides access to a broad range of socio-demographic,
labour market and attitudinal variables that are not often found in one
dataset, including the capacity to generate information relating to
couples in a household. This paper highlights some important gaps in
fertility research in Australia, and uses Wave 1 of the HILDA datasets to
conduct a study of the association of selected structural factors with
fertility expectations and partnering. The analysis examines the effects
for both men and women and includes factors such as remoteness from
cities and country of origin differences, which have long been associated
with variations in fertility. Also discussed are age and trends;
relationship formation and stability; education, work and financial
security; delayed childbearing among higher educated; family size;
childlessness.
Population, gender and reproductive choice: the
motherhood questions: directions for policy.
Bryson,
L; Mackinnon, A
Magill, SA: Hawke Institute, University of South
Australia, 2000, 13p (Hawke Institute Working paper no.6) and Online (PDF
22K)
This paper provides a summary of key points to emerge
from the research papers presented at the workshop 'Population, gender
and reproductive choice: the motherhood questions', held in Adelaide in
February 2000. The paper includes perspectives from a range of
disciplines, including demography, economics, history, psychology and
sociology. It sets out recommendations for policy on issues such as
improving women's family formation choices, valuing children as a public
good, improving child care arrangements, recognising the needs of carers,
promoting education about and access to contraception, and promoting
equitable and family friendly workplaces.
Returning to work following childbearing in Australia.
Baxter, Jennifer
In: Families Matter: 9th Australian Institute of
Family Studies Conference, Melbourne, February 2005 - proceedings.
Melbourne, Vic: Australian Institute of Family Studies, 2005, 23p,
tables, Online only
In Australia, women's employment is often
disrupted to some extent by child bearing, with women taking time out of
the labour force to care for young children, and then often returning to
work part-time to better manage the competing priorities of work and
family. This paper explores the relationship between childbearing and
employment by examining the workforce transitions after childbearing,
focusing on the return to full-time or part-time work. The work history
collected as part of the Negotiating the Life Course Survey, along with
the birth and relationship history and other key variables, makes it
possible to construct a broad timeline of transitions back to work after
childbearing, differentiating between transitions to full-time or
part-time work. Discrete time event history analysis has been used to
explore how the timing of return to work has changed in recent decades,
and to identify characteristics of women likely to return to work earlier
than others, or more likely to return to full-time rather than part-time
work. (Author abstract)
The changing living arrangements of children,
1946-2001.
de Vaus, David A; Gray, Matthew
Journal
of Family Studies v.10 no.1 Apr 2004: 9-19, tables, figures
Widespread social changes over the last half century have been reflected
in changes in family forms. These changes have resulted in increased
family diversity which, in turn, is reflected in the more diverse living
arrangements experienced by children as they grow up. This paper is the
first to provide reliable national estimates of the extent to which the
living arrangements of Australian children have changed. Using
relationship and fertility histories from the nationally representative
Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia household panel survey
(HILDA), the analysis describes the changing patterns of living
arrangements of 12,441 children between 1946-2001. Its methodology allows
the examination of the different living arrangements experienced by
children during the first 15 years of life and avoids the static analysis
that relies on point-in-time estimates. Furthermore, unlike analysis that
relies on official birth and divorce statistics, the present analysis is
able to identify family changes experienced by children as a result of
parental separation. Thus, it takes into account transitions related to
parental cohabitation as well as marriage. (Journal abstract)
The high cost of not having children.
Kerin,
Tony
Threshold no.86 Mar 2006: 38-39
What are some of
the factors involved in the decisions of fertile people to have or not
have children? This article considers financial costs, lifestyle,
stress, emotional and psychological decision making, grandparenting, and
the cost of not having children.
The
impact of young motherhood on education, employment
and marriage.
Bradbury, Bruce
Sydney, NSW: Social
Policy Research Centre, University of New South Wales, 2006, 34p, tables,
figures (Discussion paper no.148), Online (PDF 322K)
Australian women who have their first childbirth when young have
significantly poorer socio economic outcomes than women who delay child
rearing, and also have comparatively negative partnering outcomes. Data
on young women from the Australian Longitudinal Study of Women's Health
are analysed in this paper to investigate outcomes for young mothers.
The impact on Australian fertility of wanting one of
each.
Kippen, Rebecca; Gray, Edith; Evans, Ann
People and Place v.13 no.2 2005: 12-20, figures
This paper
examines the extent to which the sex of first, second and subsequent
births influences parents' decisions to have another child. The key
findings are: a) the sex of the first born in Australia has no influence
on the decision of mothers to have a second child, b) that mothers with
two children of the same sex are 25 per cent more likely to have a third
child than are mothers with a boy and a girl, and c) mothers with three
children of the same sex are more likely to have a fourth birth than
mothers whose three children include both sexes. (Journal abstract)
Undervalued, expensive and difficult: young women talk about
motherhood.
Maher, JaneMaree
Youth Studies Australia
v.24 no.2 Jun 2005: 11-16
There has been considerable public
debate in Australia around falling fertility rates; however, the voices
of young women have not been prominent in these debates. JaneMaree Maher
presents 16 young women's views of motherhood. Their positive views about
the value to society of motherhood sit alongside pragmatic concerns about
managing mothering and other life aspirations. Their thinking, especially
in regard to the social and economic costs of motherhood, is influenced
by observations of contemporary women 'doing' motherhood. (Journal
abstract)
What
women (and men) want: births, policies and choices:
summary report.
Maher, JaneMaree; Dever,
Maryanne; Curtin, Jennifer; Singleton, Andrew
Melbourne, Vic:
School of Political and Social Inquiry, Monash University, 2004, 50p,
Online
The Families, Fertility and the Future study aimed to
examine how women and men determine whether or not to have children and
if so, their number and timing; understand how changing public policies,
family obligations, gender roles and labour market patterns inform these
decisions; and explore reasons behind falling fertility rates.
Interviews were held during 2002 and 2003 with 114 Victorian women and
men in order to provide a snapshot of how individuals assess the costs
and benefits of having children and how women's reproductive choices, in
particular, are negotiated in relation to career, personal and
relationship goals.
Wonder woman: the myth of 'having it all'.
Haussegger, Virginia
Crows Nest, NSW: Allen and Unwin, 2005,
310p
Can today's women really 'have it all', or have they
been duped? When did the superwomen of the 1980s become the wondering
women of the new millennium? And where have all of their achievements
left them? These questions are posed by a journalist who was frustrated
and angry about her own childlessness and wrote an opinion piece for a
major metropolitan newspaper. By speaking about her own personal pain
and confusion, she set off a debate about a number of issues, including
whether feminism had failed women, where it had left them when it came to
having children, and whether 'career women' should stop complaining about
something that was their choice. The author describes how the choices
women make in the twenties, thirties and forties about career, love, sex,
fertility and motherhood shape and define them, and society as a
whole.

