Household Demography: Adoption and Family Size in Vanuatu
Family size is an important and complex component of children鈥檚 well-being: more
children can demand more resources, but they can also be important contributors
to the household. A trend toward smaller family size with increasing access to
markets and formal education鈥攁 component of what is known as a 鈥渄emographic
transition鈥濃攊s often assumed to be universal and inevitable. However, actual
drivers of the decisions families make in building their households in a changing
economic landscape remain poorly understood.
绿帽社 faculty member Katherine Wander is investigating these
decisions as part of a collaborative project across the islands of the archipelago
of
Vanuatu. The project investigates how households鈥 economic and subsistence
strategies affect family size and birth rates, including testing the hypothesis that
families in mixed economies鈥攍ike many islands of Vanuatu鈥攎ay diversify their
livelihoods and minimize risk by having more, rather than fewer, children. In
addition, the project investigates how the widespread practices of adoption and
fosterage in Vanuatu fit into strategies not only for raising children, but also for
building households as economic units, and how all of these strategies impact
children鈥檚 growth, nutrition, and well-being.
The team鈥檚 ongoing data collection in Vanuatu will illuminate the complex
interactions between subsistence production, market engagement, and educational
opportunity in households鈥 decisions regarding ideal family size, adoption, and
fosterage. Data on children鈥檚 growth, nutrition, and energetics will further allow
the
project to investigate how family size, adoption, and fosterage affect children鈥檚
health and well-being.
For more inforamtion please contact Katherine Wander.