resource

您的位置: 首页 > 特色资源 > 特色资源列表页 > 资源详情

Determinants and Consequences of High Fertility : A Synopsis of the Evidence
作者:
World Bank
来源地址:
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27497
关键词:
ABORTIONABSTINENCEACCESS TO FAMILY PLANNINGACCESS TO REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH SERVICESACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROMEAGE DISTRIBUTIONAGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIONAIR POLLUTIONASSISTANCE FOR POPULATIONBEHAVIOR CHANGEBIODIVERSITYCARBON DIOXIDECHANGES IN FERTILITYCHILD HEALTHCHILD MORTALITYCHILD SURVIVALCHILDBEARINGCONDOMCONDOM USECONSEQUENCES OF FERTILITYCONTRACEPTIONCONTRACEPTIVE METHODSCONTRACEPTIVE PRACTICECONTRACEPTIVE PREVALENCECONTRACEPTIVE USEDECLINE IN FERTILITYDEMOGRAPHIC FACTORSDEMOGRAPHIC IMPACTDEMOGRAPHIC PHENOMENADEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITIONDEPENDENCY RATIODEVELOPING COUNTRIESDEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCEEARLY CHILDHOODEARLY CHILDHOOD MORTALITYECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF POPULATIONECONOMIC GROWTHECONOMIC PRODUCTIVITYEDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENTEFFECTS OF POPULATIONELDERLYENVIRONMENTAL REQUIREMENTSFAMILY PLANNINGFAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMFAMILY PLANNING SERVICESFAMILY SIZEFERTILITYFERTILITY ATTITUDESFERTILITY CONTROLFERTILITY DECLINEFERTILITY PREFERENCESFERTILITY RATEFERTILITY REGULATIONFERTILITY TRANSITIONFERTILITY TRANSITIONSFEWER CHILDRENFEWER PREGNANCIESFIRST BIRTHFIRST MARRIAGEFOREST COVERFORMULATION OF POPULATIONFOSSIL FUELSGENDER EQUITYGREENHOUSE GASESGROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCTHEALTH COALITIONHEALTH RISKSHIVHIV INFECTIONHUMAN CAPITALHUMAN DEVELOPMENTHUMAN HEALTHHUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUSHUMAN LIFEHUMAN POPULATIONHUMAN POPULATION DENSITYHUMAN POPULATION GROWTHHUMAN SETTLEMENTHUSBANDSIMPACT OF POPULATIONIMPACT OF POPULATION GROWTHIMPACT ON FERTILITYIMPLICATIONS FOR POPULATION POLICYINDIVIDUAL WELFAREINFANTINFANT MORTALITYINFANT MORTALITY RATEINFORMATION CAMPAIGNSINFORMED DECISIONSINTERNATIONAL FAMILY PLANNINGINTERNATIONAL FAMILY PLANNING PERSPECTIVESINTERNATIONAL WOMENLABOR FORCELAMLARGE CITIESLARGE FAMILIESLEVEL OF FERTILITYLIFETIME RISKLIVE BIRTHSLOW BIRTH WEIGHTLOW-INCOME SETTINGSLOWER FERTILITYMANAGEMENT OF POPULATIONMARRIED WOMENMATERNAL CAUSESMATERNAL DEATHMATERNAL HEALTHMATERNAL MORBIDITYMATERNAL MORTALITYMILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALMODERN CONTRACEPTIONMORTALITYMORTALITY DECLINEMORTALITY RISKMOTHERNATIONAL POPULATIONNATURAL ENVIRONMENTNEED FOR FAMILY PLANNINGNEONATAL MORTALITYNUMBER OF BIRTHSNUMBER OF CHILDRENNUTRITIONOLD AGEPANDEMICPOLICY RESEARCHPOLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPERPOPULATION ACTIONPOPULATION ACTION INTERNATIONALPOPULATION AND DEVELOPMENTPOPULATION ASSOCIATIONPOPULATION CHANGEPOPULATION COUNCILPOPULATION DEBATEPOPULATION DENSITYPOPULATION EDUCATIONPOPULATION FACTORSPOPULATION GROWTH RATEPOPULATION GROWTH RATESPOPULATION INCREASEPOPULATION MATTERSPOPULATION POLICYPOPULATION PRESSUREPOPULATION STUDIESPOTENTIAL CONTRIBUTIONPRACTITIONERSPREGNANCIESPREGNANCYPROGRESSPROVISION OF FAMILY PLANNINGPUBLIC HEALTHRAPID POPULATION GROWTHRATE OF POPULATION GROWTHRECIPIENT COUNTRIESREDUCING MATERNAL MORTALITYREPRODUCTIVE AGEREPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIORREPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOURREPRODUCTIVE DESIRESREPRODUCTIVE HEALTHREPRODUCTIVE PATTERNSREPRODUCTIVE PREFERENCESREPRODUCTIVE-AGE COUPLESRESOURCE CONSTRAINTSRESPECTRISK OF DEATHRURAL AREASSEXUAL BEHAVIORSEXUAL PARTNERSSMALL FAMILIESSOCIAL BARRIERSSOCIAL FACTORSSOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTSOCIOECONOMIC FACTORSSOIL EROSIONSPECIESSTART OF CHILDBEARINGSTATE UNIVERSITYUNEMPLOYMENTUNITED NATIONS POPULATION FUNDUNWANTED PREGNANCIESURBAN AREASURBANIZATIONWOMANWORKING-AGE POPULATIONYOUNG AGESReport
年份:
2010
出版地:
Washington,USA
语种:
English
摘要:
In the six decades since 1950, fertility has fallen substantially in developing countries. Even so, high fertility, defined as five or more births per woman over the reproductive career, characterizes 33 countries. Twenty-nine of these countries are in Sub-Saharan Africa. High fertility poses health risks for children and their mothers, detracts from human capital investment, slows economic growth, and exacerbates environmental threats. These and other consequences of high fertility are reviewed in the first half of this paper. Recognizing these detrimental consequences motivates two inter-related questions that are addressed in the second half of the paper: Why does high fertility persist? And what can be done about it? The high-fertility countries lag in many development indicators, as reflected for example in their rate of progress toward achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). These countries have also received less development assistance for population and reproductive health than countries more advanced in their transitions to lower fertility, and the assistance they did receive increased only marginally from 1995 to 2007, a period during which commitments to both health and HIV/AIDS rose substantially.

意 见 箱

匿名:登录

个人用户登录

找回密码

第三方账号登录

忘记密码

个人用户注册

必须为有效邮箱
6~16位数字与字母组合
6~16位数字与字母组合
请输入正确的手机号码

信息补充