Abstract
Individuals' fertility behaviors are likely to be associated with their siblings' due to social influence mechanisms and uncertainties involved in making fertility transitions. Such cross-sibling effects were shown to be stronger when siblings have similar demographic traits. While being a proxy for sibling relationship quality, no study has directly investigated the association between sibling closeness and their fertility transitions. Using four waves of data from the Netherlands Kinship Panel Study, this study adopted a dynamic design where the outcome is whether siblings had children in the same period between panel waves: “jumping together or not” and estimated multilevel binary and multinomial logistic models (N dyad-waves = 6314). We found that siblings with higher relationship quality were more inclined to have children simultaneously, compared to the other categories. In contrast to a sibling having a fertility transition alone, sibling conflict was positively linked to both not having children. In conclusion, sibling closeness is important for siblings’ fertility alignment, including both having and not having children simultaneously.
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
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Artikelnummer | 103054 |
Tidsskrift | Social Science Research |
Vol/bind | 122 |
Antal sider | 12 |
ISSN | 0049-089X |
DOI | |
Status | Udgivet - 2024 |
Bibliografisk note
Funding Information:The research is funded by the Research Foundation \u2013 Flanders (FWO), under grant no. G017519N & no. V407623N.The authors acknowledge the financial support from the \u2018Major Investments Fund\u2019 of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), under grant 480-10-009 for the collection of the NKPS.
Funding Information:
The research is funded by the Research Foundation \u2013 Flanders (FWO), under grant no. G017519N & no. V407623N.
Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the financial support from the \u2018Major Investments Fund\u2019 of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), under grant 480-10-009 for the collection of the NKPS.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2024