Publication | Closed Access
Consequences of Family Policies on Childbearing Behavior: Effects or Artifacts?
266
Citations
68
References
2008
Year
FertilityReproductive HealthEducationPolicy AnalysisFamily FormationInvoluntary ChildlessnessGender StudiesSocial Policy ResearchPublic HealthFamily RelationshipsFamily DiversityPublic PolicyFamily PoliciesFertility PolicyFamily PolicyChild DevelopmentPolicy StudiesFamily EconomicsSociologyIndividual BehaviorDemographySocial PolicyPublic PoliciesFamily Dynamic
This article argues for a more careful consideration of theoretical and methodological approaches in studies of the effects of public policies, labeled here as family policies, on childbearing behavior. We employ elements of comparative welfare‐state research, of the sociology of “constructed categories,” and of “the new institutionalism” to demonstrate that investigations into policy effects need to contextualize policies and need to reduce their complexity by focusing on “critical junctures,”“space,” and “uptake.” We argue that the effects of family policies can only be assessed properly if we study their impact on individual behavior. Event‐history models applied to individual‐level data are the state‐of‐the‐art of such an approach. We use selected empirical studies from Sweden to demonstrate that the type of approach that we advocate prevents us from drawing misleading conclusions.
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