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Declining fertility on the frontier: the Ecuadorian Amazon.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Carr, DL; Pan, WKY; Bilsborrow, RE
Published in: Population and environment
September 2006

This paper examines farm and household characteristics associated with a rapid fertility decline in a forest frontier of the Ecuadorian Amazon. The Amazon basin and other rainforests in the tropics are among the last frontiers in the ongoing global fertility transition. The pace of this transition along agricultural frontiers will likely have major implications for future forest transitions, rural development, and ultimately urbanization in frontier areas. The study here is based upon data from a probability sample of 172 women who lived on the same farm in 1990 and 1999. These data are from perhaps the first region-wide longitudinal survey of fertility in an agricultural frontier. Descriptive analyses indicate that fertility has plummeted in the region, which is surprising since it had remained high and unchanging among migrant colonists up to 1990. Thus only half of the women in our sample reported having a birth during the 1990-1999 time period, and most women report in 1999 that they do not want to have any more children. Analyses, controlling for women's age, corroborate hypotheses about land-fertility relations. For example, women from households with a legal land title had fewer than half as many children as those from households without a title. Large cattle (pasture) holdings and hiring laborers to work on the farm (which may replace household labor) are both related to socio-economic status that is traditionally associated with lower fertility. Similarly, distance to the nearest community center is positively related to fertility. Factors negatively related to fertility include increasing temporary out-migration of adult men or women from the household, asset accumulation, and access to electricity.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Population and environment

DOI

ISSN

0199-0039

Publication Date

September 2006

Volume

28

Issue

1

Start / End Page

17 / 39

Related Subject Headings

  • Demography
  • 44 Human society
  • 41 Environmental sciences
  • 38 Economics
  • 16 Studies in Human Society
  • 14 Economics
  • 05 Environmental Sciences
 

Citation

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ICMJE
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Carr, D. L., Pan, W. K. Y., & Bilsborrow, R. E. (2006). Declining fertility on the frontier: the Ecuadorian Amazon. Population and Environment, 28(1), 17–39. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11111-007-0032-y
Carr, David L., William K. Y. Pan, and Richard E. Bilsborrow. “Declining fertility on the frontier: the Ecuadorian Amazon.Population and Environment 28, no. 1 (September 2006): 17–39. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11111-007-0032-y.
Carr DL, Pan WKY, Bilsborrow RE. Declining fertility on the frontier: the Ecuadorian Amazon. Population and environment. 2006 Sep;28(1):17–39.
Carr, David L., et al. “Declining fertility on the frontier: the Ecuadorian Amazon.Population and Environment, vol. 28, no. 1, Sept. 2006, pp. 17–39. Epmc, doi:10.1007/s11111-007-0032-y.
Carr DL, Pan WKY, Bilsborrow RE. Declining fertility on the frontier: the Ecuadorian Amazon. Population and environment. 2006 Sep;28(1):17–39.
Journal cover image

Published In

Population and environment

DOI

ISSN

0199-0039

Publication Date

September 2006

Volume

28

Issue

1

Start / End Page

17 / 39

Related Subject Headings

  • Demography
  • 44 Human society
  • 41 Environmental sciences
  • 38 Economics
  • 16 Studies in Human Society
  • 14 Economics
  • 05 Environmental Sciences