Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/34373

Title: Farewell’s children. Using the life course perspective to understand female late fertility
Authors: Costa, Rosalina
Editors: Nico, M.
Pollock, G.
Keywords: age-female-fertility
life-course
time
family
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Routledge
Citation: COSTA, Rosalina Pisco (2022). Farewell's children. Using the life course perspective to understand female late fertility. In M. Nico & G. Pollock (Ed.). The Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Inequalities and the Life Course (pp. 312-321). London: Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429470059 (ISBN: 978-1-138-60150-5 (hbk) | ISBN: 978-1-032-16351-2 (pbk) | ISBN: 978-0-429-47005-9 (ebk)).
Abstract: This chapter maps the complexity of studying inequalities across age-female-fertility decisions and outcomes. In so doing, it advocates for a life-course perspective and longitudinal analysis while presenting innovation in the field. Based upon the author’s previous empirical work, and an updated literature review, hypotheses are put forward to understand fertility from 40 onwards as a complex process where the individual actor is at the core of the life-course. Illustrations are given on how time-domain-level interdependencies, and their multiple interactions are central to achieve more comprehensive and rigorous understandings of contemporary life courses. Making use of the theoretical insights of the life-course perspective one might argue that, in deciding to have children after “a certain age”, women anticipating consequences of their behaviour or observing changes in their environments are following their subjective beliefs about what will best serve their well-being. Accordingly, what they perceive as “good reasons” is strongly shaped by their prior biographical experiences, including prior knowledge, expertise, values and attitudes (the “shadows of the past”), as well as by the more or less uncertain expectations about the consequences of a given action and the consequences of such action for other future actions (the “shadows of the future”). At the end, the overcoming of social and biological limits imposed by age on fertility places those women as unsynchronized before the traditional family calendar while synchronized before their own life-course.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/34373
Type: bookPart
Appears in Collections:CICS.NOVA - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros
SOC - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormat
Farewells_children_RCosta2022.pdf528.72 kBAdobe PDFView/OpenRestrict Access. You can Request a copy!
FacebookTwitterDeliciousLinkedInDiggGoogle BookmarksMySpaceOrkut
Formato BibTex mendeley Endnote Logotipo do DeGóis 

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

Dspace Dspace
DSpace Software, version 1.6.2 Copyright © 2002-2008 MIT and Hewlett-Packard - Feedback
UEvora B-On Curriculum DeGois