The demographic consequences of changing employment opportunities: Women in the Dutch Meierij in the nineteenth century |
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Authors: | Marlou Schrover |
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Affiliation: | Marlou Schrover is coeditor, with Gertjan de Groot, of Women Workers and Technological Change in Europe in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, London 1995, USA. |
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Abstract: | "In the nineteenth century, the demographic development of the Meierij, a region in the south-east of the Netherlands, was different from that of the rest of modernizing northern Europe. Infant mortality remained high, while it dropped elsewhere. The article shows why the current explanation for high infant mortality, which links a sustained high infant mortality to a change in feeding habits is not valid. Increased fertility due, among other reasons, to a lower marital age offers a better explanation. Changes in economic options open to unmarried women provide the clue. With fewer premarital occupational possibilities, women would have been more inclined to marry, or there would have been less pressure on them to forestall a marriage in order to profit to the full from the occupational options. More and earlier marriages meant more children were born, and also a higher infant mortality rate." |
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