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Featured researches published by Francesca Fiori.


Advances in Life Course Research | 2014

Geographical variations in fertility and transition to second and third birth in Britain.

Francesca Fiori; Elspeth Graham; Zhiqiang Feng

Geographical variations in fertility have been observed within several countries in Northern Europe, with higher fertility in rural areas, smaller settlements and city suburbs. However, the processes underlying such fertility variations across residential contexts are not well understood. This paper contributes to the on-going debate by looking at local variations in fertility in Britain. It aims to disentangle the relative contribution of a number of factors, including the socio-economic characteristics of individuals, housing conditions, patterns of residential relocation and lastly, contextual factors stricto sensu. In addition, it seeks to identify those aspects of reproductive behaviour which are more likely to be associated with the observed spatial differences, and to distinguish between those that may be influenced by local context and those that respond to social influences at different scales. The focus is on local fertility contexts which, we argue, have the potential to influence the fertility behaviour of individuals through processes of social learning. Individual level data from the British Household Panel Survey and methods of event history analysis are used to explore womens transitions to second and third order births in Britain in the early 21st century. Our findings indicate that individual reproductive life paths respond to a variety of social processes acting at various scales, and that these influences vary by birth order. Most interestingly, local fertility contexts influence transition to first birth but not transition to higher order births, which are mainly associated with individual characteristics of women and their partners. Dominant spacing effects, however, suggest that local contexts have an indirect impact on second and third births through age at the onset of childbearing. The study demonstrates the importance of considering social interaction theories, and their extension to scale-sensitive spatial contexts in which these interactions take place, when analysing geographical variations in fertility. Future research seeking to explain subnational fertility variations must recognize the importance of developing theoretical understandings to inform empirical work.


European Journal of Population-revue Europeenne De Demographie | 2017

Choosing to Remain Childless? A Comparative Study of Fertility Intentions Among Women and Men in Italy and Britain

Francesca Fiori; Francesca Rinesi; Elspeth Graham

Pathways to childlessness may differ not only between individuals but also at the population level. This paper investigates differences in childlessness by comparing two countries—Britain and Italy—where levels of childlessness are high in comparison with many other European countries, but which have distinct fertility trajectories and family regimes. Using data from two large, representative national samples of women and men of reproductive age in a co-residential partnership, it presents a rich analysis of the characteristics associated with intended childlessness, net of the aspects associated with being childless at interview. Although childlessness intentions are generally comparable between men and women of the same age, results show a link between socio-economic disadvantage and childlessness for British men as well as the importance of men’s employment for childbearing decisions in Italy. These findings support the view that pathways into childlessness are gendered and highlight the importance of partnership context in the understanding of fertility intentions. Then, the level of childlessness at interview is comparable across the two countries. However, a higher proportion of respondents in Italy is only provisionally childless, whereas a larger proportion of British respondents intends to remain childless. Framing these differences in fertility intentions within the wider context of family and fertility regimes allows insight into the extent to which observed levels of lifetime childlessness at the population level might result from a specific combination of intended childlessness, postponed decisions leading to involuntary childlessness, or constraints affecting abilities to achieve intentions at the individual level.


Ageing & Society | 2017

Household changes and diversity in housing consumption at older ages in Scotland

Francesca Fiori; Elspeth Graham; Zhiqiang Feng

ABSTRACT This paper contributes to understanding housing adjustments in later life by investigating the role of four key lifecourse transitions experienced by older individuals and their households, namely changes in health, retirement, union transitions and adult children leaving the household. Using data from a representative sample of the Scottish population for the decade 2001–2011, the study examines who moves and, for movers, whether they adjust their housing size in response to changes in their personal and household circumstances. In particular, the study explores diversity in housing consumption at older ages by investigating whether the triggers of upsizing or downsizing differ across tenure groups. The majority of older adults in Scotland do not change their place of residence during the study decade. For the minority who do move, all four lifecourse transitions are significant triggers for residential relocation but there is considerable diversity across the two major tenure groups in the influence of household changes on their housing consumption adjustments. In both tenure groups, however, the presence of children in the household is associated with upsizing and is a significant impediment to downsizing. Given the relative rootedness of older parents with co-resident adult children and their propensity to upsize rather than downsize if they move, our findings raise concerns over the interdependencies between younger and older generations in the housing market.


Social Science & Medicine | 2016

Employment insecurity and mental health during the economic recession: An analysis of the young adult labour force in Italy

Francesca Fiori; Francesca Rinesi; Daniele Spizzichino; Ginevra Di Giorgio


Population Research and Policy Review | 2013

Economic Insecurity and the Fertility Intentions of Italian Women with One Child

Francesca Fiori; Francesca Rinesi; Antonella Pinnelli; Sabrina Prati


Demographic Research | 2018

Economic reasons for not wanting a second child : changes before and after the onset of the economic recession in Italy

Francesca Fiori; Elspeth Graham; Francesca Rinesi


Archive | 2015

To downsize or not? Household changes and housing consumption among older adults in Scotland

Elspeth Graham; Francesca Fiori; Zhiqiang Feng


Archive | 2016

Fertility change in the context of economic recession in Italy and Spain

Elspeth Graham; Albert Sabater; Francesca Fiori


Archive | 2015

Social inequalities and changing transitions to home ownership among young adults in Scotland over two decades

Elspeth Graham; Francesca Fiori; Zhiqiang Feng


Archive | 2015

Who gets on to the property ladder in Scotland? Changing transitions to home ownership among young adults over two decades

Elspeth Graham; Francesca Fiori; Zhiqiang Feng

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Elspeth Graham

University of St Andrews

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Zhiqiang Feng

University of St Andrews

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Albert Sabater

University of St Andrews

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Antonella Pinnelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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