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Citation

Hays, Jake J. & Guzzo, Karen Benjamin (2022). Does Sibling Composition in Childhood Contribute to Adult Fertility Behaviors?. Journal of Marriage and Family, 84(1), 53-79.

Abstract

Objective: This work addresses whether adolescent sibling composition—the presence of full-, half-, and step-siblings—is associated with adult childbearing behaviors. Background Recent research suggests that family complexity is transmitted across generations, with individuals with half-siblings (i.e., parental multipartner fertility [MPF]) having an increased risk of MPF themselves. Yet this work may confound parental composition and sibling composition, as complex sibling ties occur more often among those living outside of a family with both biological parents.
Method: Using data from Rounds 1–18 of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 1997 Cohort, the authors test, for men and women separately, whether parental composition and sibling composition in adolescence are independently associated with the marital status of first births (N = 8768) and MPF (N = 5574).
Results: Having half-siblings, but not full- or step-siblings, increases women's odds of a nonmarital first birth over no birth and a marital birth, even when accounting for parental composition. Having half-siblings also increases women's risk of MPF, though this link is attenuated with controls for first birth characteristics. These associations are not present for men. Parental composition is independently linked to fertility.
Conclusion: For women, accounting for sibling composition appears to capture aspects of family that are not identified with parental composition.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1111/jomf.12788

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Journal of Marriage and Family

Author(s)

Hays, Jake J.
Guzzo, Karen Benjamin

Article Type

Regular

Data Set/Study

National Longitudinal Studys (NLS)

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Nonspecific

ORCiD

Guzzo - 0000-0001-9718-8465