Record Details

Cross-National Value of Children Study: United States Sample, 1975

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Field Value
 
Title Cross-National Value of Children Study: United States Sample, 1975
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/EK1ZWU
 
Creator Hoffman, Lois Wladis
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description The purpose of this study was to explore the motivational factors that lie behind the desire for children. In particular, the needs that children satisfy, as well as the costs, both emotional and financial, were assessed and analyzed. The Value and Costs of Children to Parents data set is a subset of data from the Cross-National Value of Children Study, a cooperative research project conducted in 1975 involving investigators from eight countries: Indonesia, Singapore, Korea, Taiwan, Thailand, the Philippines, Turkey, and the United States.




Investigators of the Cross-National Value of Children Study were concerned primarily with the psychological satisfactions that children are perceived as providing for their parents, and the relationship between these and fertility attitudes and behavior. The goal of the study was to understand better what needs children are perceived as satisfying, how the availability of alternative sources of satisfaction affect these views, and how the particular needs translate to the number of children desired.



The Murray Research Archive holds numeric file data from the United States sample, consisting of 1,569 women and 456 of their husbands.
 
Subject Social Sciences
 
Type survey