FAO AGRIS - International System for Agricultural Science and Technology

Determinants and Consequences of High Fertility

2010

World Bank


Bibliographic information
Other Subjects
Development assistance; Fertility regulation; Population action; Fewer pregnancies; First birth; Policy research; Fertility control; Sexual behavior; Demographic phenomena; Mortality decline; Educational attainment; Access to reproductive health services; Working-age population; Fewer children; Level of fertility; Reproductive patterns; International women; Modern contraception; Condom use; Infant mortality rate; Population studies; Human life; Rapid population growth; Maternal mortality; Low-income settings; Contraceptive prevalence; Rate of population growth; Early childhood mortality; Consequences of fertility; Early childhood; Changes in fertility; Maternal morbidity; Reproductive desires; Maternal causes; Maternal health; Population policy; Informed decisions; Impact of population growth; Contraceptive practice; Population action international; Maternal death; Lifetime risk; Impact on fertility; National population; Formulation of population; Married women; Population and development; Population council; Childbearing; Human development; Hiv infection; Fertility attitudes; Sexual partners; United nations population fund; Population matters; Pregnancies; Population debate; Access to family planning; Human settlement; Neonatal mortality; Potential contribution; Condom; Mother; Infant mortality; Family planning services; Implications for population policy; Lam; Family planning program; Child survival; Pandemic; Child mortality; First marriage; Socioeconomic factors; Contraception; Risk of death; Demographic impact; Social factors; Large families; Reproductive preferences; Reproductive behavior; Contraceptive use; Provision of family planning; Fertility preferences; Fertility transitions; Impact of population; Low birth weight; Labor force; Husbands; Unwanted pregnancies; Environmental requirements; Assistance for population; Mortality risk; Young ages; Fertility transition; Human population density; Management of population; Population growth rates; Reproductive-age couples; Population association; Progress; Resource constraints; State university; Economic consequences of population; Contraceptive methods; Behavior change; Population growth rate; Recipient countries; Need for family planning; Decline in fertility; Fertility decline; Reproductive age; Fertility rate; Start of childbearing; Demographic factors; Health coalition; Policy research working paper; Live births; Number of children; Effects of population; Abstinence; Reducing maternal mortality; Individual welfare; Millennium development goal; International family planning perspectives; Woman; International family planning; Small families; Human population growth; Practitioners; Lower fertility; Social barriers; Information campaigns; Number of births; Respect; Large cities; Economic productivity
Language
English

2021-06-15
AGRIS AP
Data Provider

This bibliographic record has been provided by World Bank

Discover this data provider's collection in AGRIS

Lookup at Google Scholar
If you notice any incorrect information relating to this record, please contact us at [email protected]