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With findings that challenge conventional wisdom, Fertility Change
on the American Frontier will interest demographers, sociologists,
and historians. Examining the marriage and childbearing behavior of
one predominantly L.D.S. (Mormon) population, the book calls into
question traditional concepts and methods used to study high
fertility populations. Mormons were responsible for the settlement,
colonization, and development of one of America's last western
frontiers. Availability of detailed information on marriage and
childbearing, in a large file of approximately 185,000 family
records, makes it possible to study the processes of the decline in
fertility more extensively than has ever been done before in a
major historical demographic study. The authors examine family
formation among cohorts of women born between 1800 and 1899 and
contrast two competing explanations of fertility change among
Western societies: an adaptation argument versus an innovation
argument. They demonstrate that the process of increasing fertility
limitation beginning in the later part of the nineteenth century
involves more than simply stopping childbearing after a given
family size has been achieved. It reflects the adoption of a
pattern of child spacing indicating a commitment to family
limitation early in the marriage cycle. Clearly we must reexamine
earlier studies which assumed that high-fertility populations were
not interested in or aware of the possibilities of fertility
control. Fertility control can no longer be treated as an
innovation of Western industrial societies or as an innovation
introduced through national family planning programs. We see that
among the Utah frontier population marriage and childbearing
represented a rational adaptation to a set of rapidly changing
social and economic conditions. Without adequate technologies for
family limitation, this population was nevertheless successful in
reducing family size quickly and dramatically, once the presumed
opportunities of the frontier disappeared. This title is part of UC
Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of
California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest
minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist
dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed
scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology.
This title was originally published in 1990.
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