Navigating New Socio-Demographic Landscapes: Using Anthropological Demography to Understand the ‘Persistence’ of High and Early Fertility Among British Pakistanis
Explorer les nouveaux paysages sociodémographiques: une approche par la démographie anthropologique pour comprendre la « persistance » d’une fécondité élevée et précoce chez les Pakistanais britanniques
Kate Hampshire (),
Mwenza Blell and
Bob Simpson
Additional contact information
Kate Hampshire: Durham University
Mwenza Blell: Durham University
Bob Simpson: Durham University
European Journal of Population, 2012, vol. 28, issue 1, No 3, 39-63
Abstract:
Abstract British Pakistanis continue to have earlier and higher fertility than other ethnic groups in the UK, despite a recent rise in educational and employment opportunities for British Pakistani women. In this paper we present findings from an interview-based study with 91 British Pakistani women and men in the Northeast of England, in order to throw some light on the reproductive choices and constraints that underlie this apparent demographic anomaly. Drawing on detailed reproductive narratives, we show that, contrary to common assumptions within the literature, relatively high and early fertility does not necessarily indicate a passive acceptance of ‘cultural norms’ or a reluctance to engage with new social and economic opportunities. For some young women at least, early motherhood represents a deliberate and strategic choice: a way of managing different sets of family-building and other aspirations, embedded within a complex interplay of relationships between individuals, couples and wider families. This study contributes to the emerging ‘inter-discipline’ of anthropological demography, which offers important insights into population processes that neither discipline can do alone.
Keywords: UK; Pakistanis; Ethnic minorities; Fertility; Family building; Anthropological demography; Royaume-Uni; Pakistanais; Minorités ethniques; Fécondité; Constitution de la famille; Démographie anthropologique (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2012
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (6)
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DOI: 10.1007/s10680-011-9252-z
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