The birth rate in late-nineteenth century Russia was high and virtually
constant, but by 1970 it had fallen by about two-thirds. Although
similar reductions have occurred in other countries, the decline in
Russian fertility is of particular interest because it took place in a
setting of great ethnic heterogeneity and under economic and social
institutions different from those in the West. This book tells the full
statistical story of trends in Russian fertility since the first census
in 1897 by examining the conditions--social, economic, cultural, and
demographic--that existed at the beginning of and during the decline in
human fertility.
Originally published in 1979.
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