Publication | Closed Access
Qualifying Social Influence on Fertility Intentions
62
Citations
29
References
2009
Year
InfertilitySocial NetworksFertilitySocial BehaviorSocial DynamicSociologyReproductive HealthQualitative MethodsSocial InfluenceFamily PsychologyFertility ResearchDemographyPublic HealthFertility PolicySocial NetworkSocial SciencesInvoluntary ChildlessnessSocial Network Analysis
Although the relevance of social interactions or social networks for fertility research has been increasingly acknowledged in recent years, little is known about the channels and mechanisms of social influences on individuals’ fertility decision-making. Drawing on problem-centred interviews and network data collected among young adults in western Germany, the authors show that qualitative methods broaden our understanding of social and contextual influences on couples’ fertility intentions, by exploring the phenomenon, taking subjective perceptions into account, analysing interactions within networks as well as the dynamics of networks. Qualitative methods allow for the collection and analysis of rich retrospective information on network dynamics in relation to life course events. This can also be helpful both to complement the still rare longitudinal data on social networks and to develop parsimonious and efficient survey instruments to collect such information in a standardized way.
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