Forced migration and the childbearing of women and men: A disruption of the tempo and quantum of fertility?
2020
It is well
known that migrant fertility is strongly associated with age at migration.
However the majority of prior research has focussed on foreign-born women who
migrated for reasons relating to education, employment, or family
reunification. Less is known about the fertility of forced migrants, whose
mobility is more likely to be associated with traumatic circumstances. This
trauma, and the lack of any opportunity for return migration, may have
significant long-run impacts on the quantum and tempo of childbearing, which
can both be expected to vary by age at migration. Here, we study a unique
example of forced displacement in which the entire population of Finnish
Karelia was forced to move to other areas of Finland following the Soviet
annexation in the 1940s. The context is unique because of its size and scale,
because we have data on almost the whole population of both men and women who
moved, and because of the similarity between origin and destination. This
similarity means that we are able to investigate the disruptive impact of
forced migration, net of other factors that impact migrant fertility such as
adaptation. Migrant selectivity also plays a more minor role because of the
exogenous nature of the event and the fact that the entire origin population
was forced to move. Our results show that, for all ages at migration from 1 to
20, female forced migrants had lower levels of completed fertility than similar
women from the rest of Finland, suggesting a permanent and pervasive disruptive
effect. Women born in 1940, during the initial forced migration, showed no
difference from other Finns. For them, disruption may be counterbalanced by a
fertility-increasing effect, as observed elsewhere for people born during a
humanitarian crisis. There is less evidence of disruption for men and no
evidence for those who migrated around the onset of puberty, suggesting a
highly gendered impact of forced migration on fertility. Evidence of disruption
persists after controlling for social and spatial mobility, which suggests that
there is no major trade-off between reproduction and social progress. We
recommend that future research examines the generalisability of our results.
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