Project Details
Network Effects on Fertility: The Social Contagion of Childbearing in Three Interaction Domains
Subject Area
Empirical Social Research
Term
from 2016 to 2019
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 317135347
This project aims to provide a comprehensive quantitative assessment of social interaction effects on fertility in Germany. Specifically, we ask whether fertility is contagious within the family, within the circle of friends, and at the workplace. These questions derive from a compelling theoretical idea that is increasingly recognized in recent research on fertility: The decision to have a child may spread across network partners through social interaction. This claim has been substantiated by a novel line of research which studies contagion effects on fertility within different domains of social interaction. Although this pioneering literature is growing steadily, it still leaves considerable gaps in knowledge about the social contagion of fertility. Two main research deficits stand out: First, there is a lack of rigorous tests identifying contagion effects and assessing their size in different social networks. Second, theoretical accounts of how contagion operates remain largely disconnected from the empirical analysis of its effects. This project seeks to fill these gaps. To accomplish this, we draw on the framework of analytical sociology, which offers a new lens through which to view the social contagion of fertility. Based on this framework, our project proposes a comprehensive set of studies to investigate contagion effects on fertility within different domains of social interaction. The proposed research will use data from the German Socio-economic Panel Study (SOEP) and the German Panel Analysis of Intimate Rela-tionships and Family Dynamics (pairfam).
DFG Programme
Research Grants
Co-Investigator
Professor Dr. Thomas Leopold