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ArtikelAttitudes About Childlessness in the United States: Correlates of Positive, Neutral, and Negative Responses  
Oleh: Koropeckyj-Cox, Tanya ; Pendell, Gretchen
Jenis: Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi: Journal of Family Issues vol. 28 no. 8 (Aug. 2007), page 1054-1082.
Topik: attitudes; childlessness; attitude formation; social norms; fertility
Fulltext: 1054.pdf (144.04KB)
Isi artikelThe study used cross-sectional analyses of the National Survey of Families and Households (1987-1988, 1992-1994) to examine attitudes about childlessness in the United States. It (a) assesses prevalence of positive, neutral, and negative attitudes about childlessness and (b) identifies the correlates of different attitudes in the population. About one fifth of adults disagreed with prescriptive norms that favor parenthood over childlessness, whereas two fifths gave neutral responses. More than 86% agreed or were neutral on whether childless adults could have fulfilling lives. Positive attitudes were consistently found among those who were female, college educated, or childless. Those with negative attitudes were distinct from those with neutral or positive attitudes and were more likely to be older, male, non-White, less educated, or have conservative religious beliefs, net of other factors. The authors argue attitudes reflect acceptance but not endorsement of childlessness, and substantial proportions of neutral responses merit closer examination.
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