Attitudes, Values, and Fertility Decisions in Poland: Analyses Based on the Polish Version of the European Survey on Opinions on Population and Welfare

Eileen Trzcinski, Wayne State University
Irena E. Kotowska, Warsaw School of Economics

This research examines how values and attitudes of Polish women shape their fertility decisions and their subsequent decisions regarding the use of parental leave after childbirth. Specific values and attitudes examined include attitudes toward children, work, labor market opportunities, perceived labor market equality and discrimination, and attitudes towards adult children's responsibilities toward aging parents. The analyses also examine whether the basic premises that form the theory behind the Second Demographic Transition can be applied to family related attitudes and behaviors in Poland. The analyses are based on the Polish Survey on Opinions on Population and Welfare, which was conducted in November/December 2001. National data are being used for country-specific studies while comparative analyses on the international data basis are carried out under the EC project "Population Policy Acceptance Study - The Viewpoint of Citizens and Policy Actors regarding the Management of Population Related Change", coordinated by the Bundesinstitut für Bevölkerungsforschung in Wiesbaden.

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Presented in Poster Session 2: Union Formation and Dissolution and Parents' Living Arrangements