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Family Planning in Taiwan

An Experiment in Social Change

Ronald Freedman, John Y. Takeshita

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Pädagogik

Beschreibung

The experimental family planning program begun in 1963 in Taichung, the provincial capital of Taiwan, was the largest intensive program of its kind ever to be carried out for a sizable concentrated population. Its use of systematic observation and measurements was also unique. In evaluating the program and the data gathered, the authors seek to establish the extent to which the decline in Taiwan's fertility level resulted from the program rather than from the changes already underway in the society at that time. Finally, two vital questions occupy them: What has been learned in Taiwan, and how much of this can be applied to other developing countries with rapid population growth?

Originally published in 1969.

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Indication (medicine), Pregnancy rate, Make A Difference, Demographic history, Primary school, Harvard University Press, Extended family, Family planning, Postpartum period, Percentage, Coitus interruptus, Unintended pregnancy, Total fertility rate, Survey methodology, Intrauterine device, Newlywed, Ownership (psychology), Population Council, Marital status, Spouse, Midwifery, Household income, Infant mortality, Standard of living, Nursing, Preventive action, Midwife, Abortion, Gross reproduction rate, Life expectancy, Amenorrhoea, American Journal of Public Health, Traditional society, Economic indicator, Demography, Adoption, Subsidy, Miscarriage, Birth rate, Developing country, Demographic transition, Residence, Doctor of Public Health, Sterilization (medicine), Birth control, Family values, Family history (medicine), Income, Response rate (survey), Taichung, Agriculture (Chinese mythology), Newspaper circulation, Marriage, Live birth (human), Fertility, Net migration rate, Net reproduction rate, Primary education, Household, Mortality rate, Pregnancy, Income in kind, Family Planning Association, Rates (tax), Gravidity and parity, Obstetrics and gynaecology, International Planned Parenthood Federation, Population, Sub-replacement fertility, Child mortality