Black-White Differences in Pregnancy Desire During the Transition to Adulthood

Author:

Barber Jennifer S.1,Guzzo Karen Benjamin2,Budnick Jamie3,Kusunoki Yasamin4,Hayford Sarah R.5,Miller Warren6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology and Kinsey Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA

2. Department of Sociology, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH, USA

3. Population Studies Center and Center for Sexuality and Health Disparities, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

4. Department of Systems, Populations, and Leadership, School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA

5. Department of Sociology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA

6. Transnational Family Research Institute, Aptos, CA, USA

Abstract

Abstract This article explores race differences in the desire to avoid pregnancy or become pregnant using survey data from a random sample of 914 young women (ages 18–22) living in a Michigan county and semi-structured interviews with a subsample of 60 of the women. In the survey data, desire for pregnancy, indifference, and ambivalence are very rare but are more prevalent among Black women than White women. In the semi-structured interviews, although few women described fatalistic beliefs or lack of planning for future pregnancies, Black and White women did so equally often. Women more often described fatalistic beliefs and lack of planning when retrospectively describing their past than when prospectively describing their future. Using the survey data to compare prospective desires for a future pregnancy with women's recollections of those desires after they conceived, more Black women shifted positive than shifted negative, and Black women were more likely to shift positive than White women—that is, Black women do not differentially retrospectively overreport prospectively desired pregnancies as having been undesired before conception. Young women's consistent (over repeated interviews) prospective expression of strong desire to avoid pregnancy and correspondingly weak desire for pregnancy, along with the similarity of Black and White women's pregnancy plans, lead us to conclude that a “planning paradigm”—in which young women are encouraged and supported in implementing their pregnancy desires—is probably appropriate for the vast majority of young women and, most importantly, is similarly appropriate for Black and White young women.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Demography

Reference82 articles.

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