TY - JOUR
T1 - Municipality Characteristics and the Fertility of Refugees in Norway
AU - Andersen, Synøve
AU - Adserà, Alícia
AU - Tønnessen, Marianne
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - The study of the fertility of immigrants has received much attention in recent years, particularly in societies with fertility rates below replacement levels. However, fertility in refugee populations remains understudied. Using rich register data on all female refugees of childbearing age (15–45 years) who arrived and settled in Norway between 2002 and 2015 (N = 23,527), we utilize the Norwegian settlement policy for refugees—which assigns all refugees coming to Norway to a municipality where they start their integration process—to study how fertility behavior in the years following settlement is related to the characteristics of the municipality to which refugee women are assigned. Importantly, we are able to control for individual-level characteristics used by the government agency at assignment, thus limiting the problem of selection on (un)observables. As explanatory variables, we focus on municipality unemployment rates, the share of non-Western immigrants already living in the municipality, and the total fertility rate in the municipality, and also control for the municipality’s age structure and childcare coverage. The study is thus of an exploratory nature. We measure these municipality characteristics the year before refugees settle and estimate their respective correlations with fertility (measured as the likelihood of having had at least one child in Norway) at the individual level for up to 8 years after settlement. We also explore heterogeneity by education and parity at settlement. We find no systematic associations between the share of non-Western immigrants in the municipality and refugees’ fertility; however, the municipality’s fertility rate is positively correlated with the likelihood of giving birth to a child in Norway, especially for women who are childless at arrival. The links between local unemployment rates and fertility are heterogeneous across education groups and parity.
AB - The study of the fertility of immigrants has received much attention in recent years, particularly in societies with fertility rates below replacement levels. However, fertility in refugee populations remains understudied. Using rich register data on all female refugees of childbearing age (15–45 years) who arrived and settled in Norway between 2002 and 2015 (N = 23,527), we utilize the Norwegian settlement policy for refugees—which assigns all refugees coming to Norway to a municipality where they start their integration process—to study how fertility behavior in the years following settlement is related to the characteristics of the municipality to which refugee women are assigned. Importantly, we are able to control for individual-level characteristics used by the government agency at assignment, thus limiting the problem of selection on (un)observables. As explanatory variables, we focus on municipality unemployment rates, the share of non-Western immigrants already living in the municipality, and the total fertility rate in the municipality, and also control for the municipality’s age structure and childcare coverage. The study is thus of an exploratory nature. We measure these municipality characteristics the year before refugees settle and estimate their respective correlations with fertility (measured as the likelihood of having had at least one child in Norway) at the individual level for up to 8 years after settlement. We also explore heterogeneity by education and parity at settlement. We find no systematic associations between the share of non-Western immigrants in the municipality and refugees’ fertility; however, the municipality’s fertility rate is positively correlated with the likelihood of giving birth to a child in Norway, especially for women who are childless at arrival. The links between local unemployment rates and fertility are heterogeneous across education groups and parity.
KW - Contextual determinants
KW - Ethnic enclave
KW - Immigrant fertility
KW - Refugee
KW - Settlement policy
KW - Unemployment
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U2 - 10.1007/s12134-021-00840-2
DO - 10.1007/s12134-021-00840-2
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85110394528
SN - 1488-3473
VL - 24
SP - 165
EP - 208
JO - Journal of International Migration and Integration
JF - Journal of International Migration and Integration
ER -