19世纪丹麦儿童和青少年的性别死亡率。探索性别比例和死亡率的模式

IF 1 3区 历史学 Q3 FAMILY STUDIES History of the Family Pub Date : 2022-06-10 DOI:10.1080/1081602X.2022.2083001
M. L. Perner, A. Mortensen, H. Castenbrandt, A. Løkke, B. Revuelta-Eugercios
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引用次数: 3

摘要

摘要在19世纪的欧洲,性别与死亡率之间的关系一直备受争议。特别是,历史学家对性别歧视影响女性死亡风险的方式和程度意见不一。本文通过研究19世纪丹麦儿童和青少年之间性别死亡率差异的证据做出了贡献。它利用儿童性别比和死亡率来探讨女性死亡率过高的普遍性。我们发现,在19世纪的大部分时间里,丹麦的女性死亡率从四岁左右开始一直持续到成年,高于男性。这种死亡率差距虽然最初很小,但在农村地区和青春期晚期是系统性的,最为明显。造成这一差距的原因是男性死亡率下降得更快。这种模式在时间上是明显的,因为19世纪的差距扩大了,在生命过程中,男性死亡率下降得更快,在儿童晚期和青少年早期达到了较低的水平。虽然各种形式的性别歧视可能减缓了女性死亡率的下降,但数据的汇总性质限制了我们的解释。然而,通过比较所采用的两种死亡率指标,我们认为,在丹麦这样的低儿童死亡率环境中,性别比例并不总是足够敏感,无法衡量儿童时期女性的超额死亡率。此外,由于性别比主要擅长测量“隐藏”或未登记的死亡率,因此在有全面可靠的生命登记系统的情况下,它们可能是衡量死亡率差异的次优指标。
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Gendered mortality of children and adolescents in nineteenth-century Denmark. Exploring patterns of sex ratios and mortality rates
ABSTRACT The relationship between gender and mortality in nineteenth-century Europe has been highly debated. In particular, historians disagree about the manner and degree to which gender discrimination affected the mortality risk of the female population. This article contributes by examining the evidence of gendered mortality differences among children and adolescents in nineteenth-century Denmark. It makes use of both child sex ratios and mortality rates to explore the prevalence of excess female mortality. We show that the female mortality rate in Denmark was higher than that of males starting from around age four and lasting until adulthood, for the majority of the nineteenth century. This mortality gap, while initially narrow, was systematic and most pronounced in rural areas and during late adolescence. The gap was produced by a faster mortality decline among males. This pattern is clear both in time, as the gap widened during the nineteenth century, and during the life course, as the male mortality rate declined faster and reached lower levels during late childhood and early adolescence. While it is possible that various forms of gender discrimination slowed the mortality decline of females, the aggregated nature of the data limits our interpretation. However, by comparing the two mortality measures employed, we argue that in a low child-mortality setting such as Denmark, sex ratios are not always sensitive enough to measure excess female mortality in childhood. Further, since sex ratios primarily excel at measuring ‘hidden’ or unregistered mortality, they may be a suboptimal measure of mortality differences in the presence of a thorough and reliable vital registration system.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
10.00%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: The History of the Family: An International Quarterly makes a significant contribution by publishing works reflecting new developments in scholarship and by charting new directions in the historical study of the family. Further emphasizing the international developments in historical research on the family, the Quarterly encourages articles on comparative research across various cultures and societies in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Pacific Rim, in addition to Europe, the United States and Canada, as well as work in the context of global history.
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