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The second demographic transition, 1986–2020: sub-replacement fertility and rising cohabitation—a global update

TLDR
In this paper, Lesthaeghe et al. considered the evolution of two "Second Demographic Tradition" core characteristics: fertility postponement and the rise of cohabitation, with particular attention being given to the first two decades of the new century.
Abstract
The article considers the evolution of two “Second Demographic Tradition” (SDT) core characteristics: fertility postponement and the rise of cohabitation, with particular attention being given to the first two decades of the new century. It can be considered as the sequel to the concise overview of the SDT published earlier in the US Proceedings of the National Academy (PNAS) (Lesthaeghe, 2014). In the first section, three optimistic views concerning the evolution of fertility are considered: (i) rises due to the end of postponement, (ii) rises connected with advancing human development and (iii) rises associated with advancing gender equality. The focus in this section is mainly but not exclusively on the European experience and its large degree of variation in fertility patterns. It is argued that these three optimistic predictions of sustained fertility rises are mainly based on observations prior to 2010, with too much weight being given to four Nordic countries and too little to other Western European countries with very similar fertility levels. However, these expectations have been thwarted during the second decade, even in the presence of advances in human development and/or gender equality. Hence, the original SDT prediction of 1986 of sustained sub-replacement fertility still holds after 35 years. We expect this to continue during the third decade as well. Furthermore, single-factor explanations are not likely to do justice to far more intricate situations that are responsive to varying structural and ideational influences. In the second section, the evolution of cohabitation is traced in Europe, the USA and Canada, the Latin American countries, three East Asian populations and selected sub-Saharan cases. At the onset, cohabitation can start either from a SDT basis among the better educated or among the poorer classes following a pattern of disadvantage (POD). It is argued that the feature of cohabitation spreads rapidly among all social classes and across all education groups and that in the process of increasing cohabitation, the POD versus SDT argument loses its significance. On a global scale, the rise in cohabitation is contingent on two dimensions: (i) contrasting historical patterns of kinship organisation, including the position of women, and (ii) further advances of the “ethics revolution”, indicating the growing dominance of individual autonomy over traditional societal norms. As a result, no breakthroughs in the near future are expected in countries with a Muslim or Hindu tradition in which no such major cultural shifts have occurred so far.

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Citations
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Contribution of Hungarian demographic science and Hungarian demographers to the work of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population

Horvath R
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe the development of demography in Hungary from 1928 to the present with a focus on the contribution of Hungarian demographers to the activities of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population (IUSSP).
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A reflection on economic uncertainty and fertility in Europe: The Narrative Framework.

TL;DR: It is argued that fertility decisions are not a mere “statistical shadow of the past”, and the Narrative Framework is advanced, a new approach to the relationship between economic uncertainty and fertility.
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Marriage and cohabitation under uncertainty: the role of narratives of the future during the COVID-19 pandemic

TL;DR: In this article, the authors address the impact of COVID-19-induced uncertainty on union formation intentions in Italy and acknowledge that decisions made in uncertain conditions rely on personal narratives of the workers.
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Prevalence of eating disorders and disordered eating in Western Asia: a systematic review and meta-Analysis.

TL;DR: A systematic literature search of major English and Arabic databases, i.e., PubMed/Medline, EMBASE, PsychInfo, Web of Science and Scopus (English), Al-Manhal (Arabic) and grey literature was done to obtain the prevalence of disordered eating and eating disorders in Western Asia as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Archaeology, demography and life history theory together can help us explain past and present population patterns.

TL;DR: For example, this article found evidence in support of the view that the relatively low long-term population growth rates of prehistoric human populations, albeit ultimately conditioned by carrying capacities, may have been owing to 'boom-bust' cycles at the regional level; rapid population growth, followed by population decline.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Unfolding Story of the Second Demographic Transition

TL;DR: It is shown that the current positive relationship between SDT and TFR levels is not a violation of the SDT theory, but the outcome of a "split correlation" with different sub-narratives concerning the onset of fertility postponement and the degree of subsequent recuperation in two parts of Europe.
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The Emergence of Lowest‐Low Fertility in Europe During the 1990s

TL;DR: In this article, the authors trace the emergence of low-low fertility to the interaction of five factors: tempo and compositional distortions reduce the total fertility rate below the associated level of cohort fertility, socioeconomic changes, social interaction effects reinforce this behavioral adjustment and contribute to large and persistent postponement in the mean age at birth.
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