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Review of Radical Political Economics
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What's this?

Globalization, Family Structure, and Declining Fertility in the Developing World

Sarah F. Harbison

Center for Population and Development Activities

Warren C. Robinson

Striking changes are occurring in family structure in the developing world, and fertility is falling due to a weakening of traditional family controls and a declining value given to procreation. A model of marriage focused on marriage as economic transaction helps explain these diverse trends. The findings reveal a serious threat to young women in such transitional societies. The declining value of their procreative power puts women at the mercy of impersonal, market-driven economic forces with which they are ill equipped to deal.

Key Words: globalization • family structure • fertility rate

Review of Radical Political Economics, Vol. 35, No. 1, 44-55 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0486613402250189


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