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      Celebrity culture and demographic change: The case of celebrity nonmarital fertility, 1974–2014

      Demographic Research
      Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research

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          The Unfolding Story of the Second Demographic Transition

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            Soap Operas and Fertility: Evidence from Brazil

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              A Cognitive-Social Model of Fertility Intentions.

              We examine the use and value of fertility intentions against the backdrop of theory and research in the cognitive and social sciences. First, we draw on recent brain and cognition research to contextualize fertility intentions within a broader set of conscious and unconscious mechanisms that contribute to mental function. Next, we integrate this research with social theory. Our conceptualizations suggest that people do not necessarily have fertility intentions; they form them only when prompted by specific situations. Intention formation draws on the current situation and on schemas of childbearing and parenthood learned through previous experience, imbued by affect, and organized by self-representation. Using this conceptualization, we review apparently discordant knowledge about the value of fertility intentions in predicting fertility. Our analysis extends and deepens existing explanations for the weak predictive validity of fertility intentions at the individual level and provides a social-cognitive explanation for why intentions predict as well as they do. When focusing on the predictive power of intentions at the aggregate level, our conceptualizations lead us to focus on how social structures frustrate or facilitate intentions and how the structural environment contributes to the formation of reported intentions in the first place. Our analysis suggests that existing measures of fertility intentions are useful but to varying extents and in many cases despite their failure to capture what they seek to measure.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Demographic Research
                DemRes
                Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research
                1435-9871
                July 2018
                August 08 2018
                : 39
                : 251-284
                Article
                10.4054/DemRes.2018.39.8
                cc6b9b40-b17b-46e8-9bec-73ebb7c1b3b2
                © 2018
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