The decline of son preference and rise of gender indifference in Taiwan since 1990
Open Access
- 16 April 2009
- journal article
- Published by Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Demographic Research
- Vol. 20, 377-402
- https://doi.org/10.4054/demres.2009.20.16
Abstract
This study explores the change of married women's sex preference for children in Taiwan since 1990, finding that there was a substantial decline of son preference and rise of "gender indifference", defined as feeling indifferent about children's sex (as opposed to desiring an equal number of boys and girls, in which the sex of children is still a primary consideration). Results show that at the individual level female education was the strongest predictor for the preference; education was negatively associated with son preference and positively with gender indifference. Cohort difference was noticeable, too. Younger cohorts were better educated than older ones so that they were more neutral about the sex and less adherent to the traditional male preference; besides, from 1992 to 2002 there was a universal intra-cohort movement toward gender neutrality and away from son preference. When the younger cohorts gradually replaced the older ones as the main child bearers in the Taiwanese society, at the aggregate level son preference declined and gender indifference rose.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Decline of Son Preference in South Korea: The Roles of Development and Public PolicyPopulation and Development Review, 2007
- Feminist Attitudes and Support for Gender Equality: Opinion Change in Women and Men, 1974-1998Social Forces, 2004
- Education and Gender Egalitarianism: The Case of ChinaSociology of Education, 2004
- FAMILY EMPLOYMENT STATUS AND GENDER ROLE ATTITUDESGender & Society, 1996
- Consequences of Son Preference in a Low-Fertility Society: Imbalance of the Sex Ratio at Birth in KoreaPopulation and Development Review, 1995
- Sampling Weights and Regression AnalysisSociological Methods & Research, 1994
- Household Composition, Extended Kinship, and Reproduction in Taiwan: 1965–1985Population Studies, 1990
- Wives' Employment, Household Behaviors, and Sex-Role AttitudesSocial Forces, 1981
- Familial Values in a Developing Society: A Decade of Change in TaiwanSocial Forces, 1981
- Sex Role Attitudes and the Employment of Married Women: the Direction of CausalityThe Sociological Quarterly, 1978