Subjective efficacy and ideal family size as predictors of favorability toward birth control
- 1 August 1970
- journal article
- Published by Duke University Press in Demography
- Vol. 7 (3) , 329-339
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2060152
Abstract
This study is an assessment of the relevance of subjective efficacy and ideal family size as predictors of favorability toward birth control. The samples considered are male factory workers in five developing nations. The effects of ideal family size and subjective efficacy are generally strong relative to those of education and the other social variables that are considered. The focus of the study is an analysis of whether subjective efficacy and ideal family size function more as independent determinants or more as intervening variables. Overall these psychological variables function more as independent determinants than as intervening variables, but in some samples these two functions are equally important.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Path Analysis: Sociological ExamplesAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1966
- Social Structure and Fertility: An Analytic FrameworkEconomic Development and Cultural Change, 1956