This project examines how family and community context interact to shape mortality, marriage, and reproduction. In examining the influence of family context, it moves beyond effects of characteristics of parents and other close relatives to focus on the role of kin living in other households and even communities. In examining the influence of community context, it moves beyond consideration of geographic and economic characteristics to focus on community social organization. Inspired by recent developments in the sociological literature on neighborhoods, it assesses whether or not communities where residents were also bound together by kinships ties had higher levels of collective efficacy and better provision of public goods that resulted in more favorable demographic outcomes. To test theories about the determinants of family change and variation, the research also examines how observed patterns of family and community contextual effects vary in response to secular changes and geographic variation in social, economic, and political context. The research makes use of one of the largest, longest, and most detailed panel data sets ever compiled for an historical and contemporary population - 300,000 individuals who lived in northeast China from 1650 to the present over as many as seventeen generations. The project links existing core data from 1.3 million individual-level observations from historical household registers, to records from family genealogies, and retrospective surveys of these same individuals, their founding ancestors who settled the area in the seventeenth century, and their twentieth-century descendants, to produce a single, rectangular file for analysis. These data are supplemented with information at the community, regional, and provincial level on social, economic, and political conditions. Measurements of the influence of family and community context on demographic and social outcomes apply event-history techniques. Fixed- and random-effect models are used to account for correlations among individuals at different levels, including the Residential household, descent group, community, and region. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01HD045695-01A2
Application #
7048119
Study Section
Social Sciences and Population Studies Study Section (SSPS)
Program Officer
Evans, V Jeffrey
Project Start
2006-04-01
Project End
2009-01-31
Budget Start
2006-04-01
Budget End
2007-01-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$289,275
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Michigan Ann Arbor
Department
Miscellaneous
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
073133571
City
Ann Arbor
State
MI
Country
United States
Zip Code
48109
Campbell, Cameron; Lee, James Z (2011) Kinship and the Long-Term Persistence of Inequality in Liaoning, China, 1749-2005. Chin Sociol Rev 44:71-103
Chen, Shuang; Lee, James; Campbell, Cameron (2010) Wealth Stratification and Reproduction in Northeast China, 1866-1907. Hist Fam 15:386-412
Campbell, Cameron D; Lee, James Z (2010) Fertility control in historical China revisited: New Methods for an Old Debate. Hist Fam 15:370-385
Campbell, Cameron D; Lee, James Z (2009) Long-term mortality consequences of childhood family context in Liaoning, China, 1749-1909. Soc Sci Med 68:1641-8