Cohort Shifts in the Timing of Births in Ghana
- 1 December 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociological Perspectives
- Vol. 32 (4) , 485-500
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1389134
Abstract
This article uses data from the Ghana Fertility Survey (GFS) 1979/1980 to examine the changing pattern of fertility behavior through the timing of births among different birth cohorts representing the onset of the fertility transition. Although the cohort changes expected do not appear to be large, there is some evidence of a pattern of birth intervals which suggests that the younger birth cohorts have shorter durations between marriage and first birth, and a slower pace for childbearing thereafter. Older women, on the other hand, exhibit relatively longer intervals from marriage to first birth and a little shorter intervals for their next births. In contrast to some previous studies, these patterns indicate that shorter intervals are not necessarily associated with shorter subsequent intervals and vice versa. The changing social meaning of marriage, increasing opportunities for the younger generation of women and prevalence of family limitation measures appear to have caused the recent changes in the fertility behavior of Ghanaian women. The composite effect of the socio-economic and cultural variables on the timing of births in Ghana will be the focus of future studies.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Historical and Subgroup Variations in the Association between Marriage and First Childbirth: a Life-Course PerspectiveJournal of Family History, 1985
- Timing of the Transition to Parenthood: A Multidimensional Birth-Interval ApproachJournal of Marriage and Family, 1985
- Abortion experience among obstetric patients at Korle-Bu Hospital, Accra, GhanaJournal of Biosocial Science, 1985
- The Baby Boom and Its ExplanationsThe Sociological Quarterly, 1983
- Nursing Frequency, Gonadal Function, and Birth Spacing Among !Kung Hunter-GatherersScience, 1980
- Breast-Feeding and Population GrowthScience, 1977
- Quaker Marriage Patterns in a Colonial PerspectiveThe William and Mary Quarterly, 1972
- Age patterns of marriagePopulation Studies, 1971
- Two and a half centuries of demographic history in a Bavarian villagePopulation Studies, 1970
- Some data on natural fertilityEugenics Quarterly, 1961