Index

Voluntary and Involuntary Childlessness

ISBN: 978-1-78754-362-1, eISBN: 978-1-78754-361-4

Publication date: 23 August 2018

This content is currently only available as a PDF

Citation

(2018), "Index", Sappleton, N. (Ed.) Voluntary and Involuntary Childlessness (Emerald Studies in Reproduction, Culture and Society), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 387-401. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78754-361-420181018

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018 Natalie Sappleton


INDEX

Accessibility, resource
, 286

Accomplishments
, 202, 205–206, 209

Actors in process
, 368–373

Adoption
, 339–340

Affirmational support
, 137

Age identity
, 197–199

accomplishments
, 205–206

cultural narratives and ageing
, 198–199

current and future roles
, 207–208

data analysis
, 201–202

intersectionality
, 196–197

methods
, 199–201

ways of knowing age
, 202–205

Age(ing)
, 174–175, 198–199, 262

childbearing
, 53

intersectionality
, 176–177

methodology
, 176

range
, 51

reflexivity
, 177–180

regret
, 180–185

terminology
, 175

ways of knowing
, 202–205

Agentic roles
, 287

‘Alliance for the Family’
, 365

Already-fragile identities of VC women
, 90

Ambivalent and undecided partners
, 252–254

Ambivalent childless self

ambivalent counterstories
, 88–90

(bad) moral luck of pronatalism
, 82–88

Wanting to Want
, 73–82

Ambivalent intimacy goals
, 250–252

Appraisal support
, 137

Appropriability, resource
, 286

Artificial insemination
, 310

Assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs)
, 52

Atlantic, The
, 86

ATLAS. ti software
, 202

Augustus’ Laws
, 220

Australia

empirical mixed-methods
, 126

pervasive pronatalist ideologies
, 126

pronatalism
, 127

women without children
, 133

Australia’s Paid Parental Leave Scheme
, 128

‘Biological clock’
, 161, 162

Bivariate analyses
, 105

Bourdieu’s sociology
, 104

Bourdieusian conceptualisation
, 155–156

Bourdieusian theoretical approach
, 99, 104, 149, 155

Breadwinning masculinity
, 266

Buddhist conception
, 64

Business ownership
, 285

Capital
, 155

Capital in pronatalist fields

bivariate results
, 107–111

childbearing preferences and capital
, 117–119

childfreedom
, 104–105

contributions to decision (not) to becoming parent
, 99–101

interaction effects
, 112

limitations/future research
, 119–120

logistic regression results
, 113–116

multivariate results
, 111–112

prevalence and demographics
, 101–102

pronatalist ideologies
, 98–99

sample and methods
, 105–106

sample characteristics
, 107, 108–110, 112, 117

theoretical orientation
, 102–104

variables and measures
, 106–107

See also Pronatalism

Capitalism
, 262, 263

Career progression
, 267–269

‘Career women’
, 265, 266

Catalysts
, 362

Catholic organisations
, 372

Celibacy
, 310

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
, 87

Child-related regret
, 54

Childbearing
, 128

age
, 53

contributions
, 149–152

decisions
, 102

intentions
, 239

preferences
, 102, 104, 117–119, 149, 155, 164–166

Childcare

and cleaning
, 289–290

policies in Germany
, 362–367

responsibilities
, 247

Childcare arrangement effects on childlessness
, 356, 357

actors in process
, 368–373

childcare policies in Germany
, 362–367

distribution of actors of policy (re)-making process
, 369

familialisation/de-familialisation indicators
, 363

FRG
, 358

GDR’s Marxist ideology
, 358

intersection
, 359–361

theoretical framework
, 361–362

Childfree
, 17, 98n1, 118, 157

adults
, 102, 103, 150

decision
, 249

participants
, 162–163

respondents
, 160

stigma
, 338, 345–348

Childfree women
, 150, 348

lives
, 74

Childfree women’s partner preferences

ambivalent and undecided partners
, 252–254

ambivalent intimacy goals
, 250–252

disbelief and relationship dissolution
, 254–255

ideal living arrangements
, 244–245

interpretative framework
, 239–241

methodological framework
, 241–243

navigating dating scene
, 247–249

partner ideals
, 245–246

partnership preferences
, 243–244

relationship initiation strategies
, 249–250

results and analysis
, 243

timing partnership formation
, 246–247

Childfree-by-choice
, 131

Childfreedom
, 101–102, 166

research
, 100, 153

Childless
, 103, 149n1, 207, 314

postponers
, 314

status
, 51

women
, 174, 176, 301

Childlessness
, 1–3, 101, 156, 195, 240, 284, 288, 289–290, 310, 339, 340, 343

categories
, 317–318

habitus
, 106

intersectional perspectives on
, 4–5

lived experiences
, 5

loneliness and regret inevitable outcomes of ageing and
, 175–185

national perspectives on
, 5–6

of people with same-sex orientation
, 324

structure, agency and
, 4

tax
, 1–2

theoretical perspectives on voluntary and involuntary
, 3–4

See also Hungarian childlessness

Childrearing
, 99

Children

gender influencing employment experiences of women without
, 262–263

long-term impact of absence of
, 55–56

understanding women with and without
, 262

See also Pressures to having children

Christian Democratic-Liberal government
, 364

Chronological age
, 204

Circumstantially childless women
, 132

Class-based interpersonal skills
, 103

Classic theories
, 21

Cleaning, catering, caring, cashiering and clerical work (five Cs)
, 287

Codebook
, 201

Coding process
, 17

Cognitive coping strategies, psychosocial influences on
, 62

Cohabiting couple, living as
, 244

Communal roles
, 287

Communality
, 287

Competitive advancement
, 100

‘Conception of life’
, 60

‘Conflict resolution’
, 60

Confucian ethics
, 339

Confucianism
, 344

Congruence
, 284

Consciousness-raising groups
, 2

Conservative corporatist regime
, 364

Conservative corporatist welfare model
, 366

Contradicting pressures
, 157

Contradictory climates
, 148

Contradictory pressures
, 151

Control variables
, 293

Convenience sampling techniques
, 120

Coping
, 60

partner/husband influences
, 60–61

and social connections
, 61

theoretical perspectives on
, 61–65

Corporatist conservative welfare state model
, 357

Counterfactual thinking
, 180

Counterstories
, 88–90

Couples in marital relationship
, 220

Couples’ dyadic relationships
, 60

Crèche Plus (Kitaplus)
, 365

Criticism
, 241

Cross-tabulation
, 30

of author location and theoretical framework
, 23, 25

of main focus and decade
, 31–32

Cultural/culture

capital
, 103, 106, 118–119, 155

and discourses
, 265

Edo culture
, 341

gender ideologies
, 106

ideology of pronatalism
, 103

narratives
, 198–199

pressures
, 160

pronatalist ideologies
, 99

transformations
, 100

Data analysis
, 201

analytic strategy for master study
, 201

analytic strategy for subsample
, 201–202

Data and variables
, 292–293

Data collection
, 178–180, 292

Day-care Facility Expansion Act
, 365

Defamilialisation
, 361

childcare policies
, 362

German childcare arrangements
, 366

Delayed childbearing
, 101

Demographics
, 101–102, 107

Dependent variable
, 292–293, 314–315

Depression
, 52–53

Descriptive phenomenological method
, 55

Desire
, 53–54

Destiny Assumption
, 220

‘Deviant’ femininities
, 266

‘Deviant’ women

mixed consequences of
, 269–271

negative consequences of
, 271–272, 273

Digital world, evolution of
, 231

‘Disavowal of choice’
, 131

Distress
, 52–53

Dominant masculinity
, 263

Dominant pronatalist ideologies
, 133

Economic capital
, 103, 106, 117, 155

Economic hardship
, 106

Edo culture
, 341

‘Einigungvertag’
, 358

Emotion-focused coping
, 62

Emotional and human relations
, 265

Emotional distress
, 52

Emotional support
, 137

Empathic activism
, 64–65

Employer-based private insurance
, 111–112

Employers
, 290

Employment
, 262

participation
, 267–269

Employment experiences of women with no children
, 266

benefits of conforming to ideal worker stereotype
, 267–269

discrimination and stereotyping
, 269–271

individual performances of femininities without children
, 273–275

organisational contexts influencing employment experiences
, 265–266

societal-level configurations influencing
, 263–265

theoretical context
, 262–263

work-life balance and access to employment benefits
, 271–273

workplace social interactions
, 273

English-language journals
, 16

ENRICH self-reported questionnaire
, 60

Entrepreneurial roles
, 284

Entrepreneurial segregation
, 285

Entrepreneurship
, 284

analysis
, 294

conceptual framework
, 290–291

data and variables
, 292–293

data collection
, 292

gender, role congruity and parental status
, 297–298

intersections of role (In)congruity and parental status
, 301

methods
, 292, 294

parental status, role congruity and
, 289–290

regression analysis
, 298–299, 300

role performance, role congruity, parental status and workplace outcomes
, 286–289

sample
, 294–296

social networks, social capital and resource acquisition
, 285–286

Ethnicity
, 293

Euro-American men’s life expectancy
, 195

Euro-American women’s life expectancy
, 195

European welfare states
, 359, 361

European-wide cohort analysis
, 1

Exclusion process
, 60, 133

External social realities
, 149

‘Failure’
, 60

Familialising childcare policies
, 362, 366

Family
, 187, 188

‘family and friends’
, 60

family-devotion schema
, 264

in Japan’s Tokugawa Period
, 338–341

work-life balance policies
, 272

Fatherhood
, 100, 221, 246

Female childlessness
, 311

Female-dominated/feminised industries
, 284

Femininities
, 262, 264

Feminism
, 1–3, 98, 152, 219

intersectional
, 140

liberal
, 223

second-wave
, 194

third-wave
, 221, 233–234

Feminist

approach
, 128

conceptualizations of empowerment
, 209

consciousness
, 178

gerontologists
, 194

journals
, 194

lenses
, 195–196, 262

literature
, 338

perspectives
, 194

research
, 176

scholars
, 177

scholarship
, 210

theories
, 23

value theory
, 73

Feminist Act, intentionally childless marriage as
, 233–234

Feminist Mystique, The
, 219

Fertility
, 120

rates
, 358, 360, 364, 365, 368, 370, 373

See also Infertility

Fostering post-pronatal mindsets
, 233

Fountain View
, 207

‘Fulfilment Assumption’
, 221

Full-time employed women with children
, 268

GDR’s Marxist ideology
, 358

Gender
, 112, 195–196, 286–287, 297–298

congruity of business sector
, 293

differences
, 150

influencing employment experiences of women without children
, 262–263

role
, 284

role congruity theory
, 287

segregation
, 289–290

Gender-role-congruent sectors
, 294, 298

‘Generation strain’ concept
, 187

Generations and Gender Survey (GGS)
, 312–313

Germany

childcare policies in
, 362–367

federal nature
, 368

German conjuncture catalysts
, 373

German welfare model
, 368

non-public providers
, 368

Gerontology
, 194, 196, 210

Government policy
, 264

Grandmother hypothesis
, 196

Grassroots-level campaign groups
, 2

Grounded Theory (GT)
, 59

GT-oriented analysis
, 57

study
, 178

Groupings
, 155

Guilt-driven pressure
, 227

Guttmacher Institute
, 86

Habitus
, 102–103, 149, 155

Half-hearted counterstories
, 88–90

Hard science framework
, 21

Having children in pronatalist social fields

Bourdieusian perspective
, 155–156

childbearing
, 148–149

childbearing preferences in social fields
, 164–166

childfree participants
, 162–163

contributions to childbearing intentions
, 149–152

experiences
, 153–154

findings
, 157

hard work withhaving family
, 163–164

‘join club’ vs. ‘don’t have kids’
, 157–161

limitations/future research
, 166–167

literature review
, 149

methodology and sample
, 156–157

prevalence
, 152–153

theoretical and methodological considerations
, 155

VC participants
, 161–162

See also Pronatalism

Hegemonic configurations
, 263

Hegemonic workers
, 263

Heisei Era Japan

childfree stigma and technological imperative in
, 345–347

reproductive technologies replacing adoption alternatives
, 347–348

Heterosexual orientation
, 323

Heterosexual voluntarily childless women
, 238

HIV prevention
, 21

Home Care Allowance Law (2012)
, 372

Home care allowances
, 366

Hungarian childlessness

categories of childlessness among women aged 30–45 and men aged
, 316

Hungarian labour market
, 322

impacts of different variables on types of childlessness
, 320–321

methods
, 312–315

non-parent by
, 2008, 318

qualitative analysis
, 323

quantitative analysis
, 312

results
, 315

sample composition of male interviewees
, 325

voluntary childlessness among men
, 329–332

voluntary childlessness among women
, 324, 326–328

See also Childlessness

Ideal workers
, 265–266, 289

benefits of conforming to ideal worker stereotype
, 267–269

mixed consequences of
, 269–271

negative consequences of
, 271–272

Identity
, 57–58

ie. See Stem family

In vitro fertilisation (IVF)
, 51, 60, 251, 310, 347

Income of ideal workers
, 267–269

Independent variables
, 293, 314–315

Individual performances of femininities without children
, 273–275

Individual-focused theories
, 21

Individualism
, 148

Industrial capitalism
, 341, 343, 344

Industrialisation
, 343–344

Infertility
, 57, 347–348

medical consequences of
, 51–54

See also Fertility

Informational support
, 137

Institute of Public Policy Research
, 187

Instrumental costs
, 150

Instrumental support
, 137–138

Intelligibility of choice
, 79–82

Intensive mothering
, 100, 119

Intentional childlessness
, 152

Intentionally childless
, 218

women
, 219

Intentionally childless couples
, 227–228, 233

clarity of mind
, 228–229

decision making
, 222–223

finding pressures
, 228

nature of intentionally childless couples’ lives
, 223–224

seek mutual understanding
, 229–230

speak up sooner rather than later
, 229

united front
, 229

Intentionally childless marriage
, 218–219

as Feminist Act
, 233–234

happier than marriages with children
, 230–231

lack societal acceptance
, 219–222

misperceptions and stereotypes
, 224–226

pressures to have children
, 226–228

road to societal acceptance
, 231–233

‘Internalise’ pronatalism
, 274

Internalising childrearing
, 99

Interpersonally habitus
, 165

Interpretative framework

previous research
, 239–240

theoretical framework
, 240–241

Interpretative phenomenological analysis (IPA)
, 57

Intersectional Bourdieusian analysis

analysis
, 294

conceptual framework
, 290–291

data and variables
, 292–293

data collection
, 292

gender, role congruity and parental status
, 297–298

intersections of role (In)congruity and parental status
, 301

method of analysis
, 294

methods
, 292

parental status, role congruity and
, 289–290

regression analysis
, 298–299, 300

role performance, role congruity, parental status and workplace outcomes
, 286–289

sample
, 294–296

social networks, social capital and resource acquisition
, 285–286

Intersectionalist feminist epistemology
, 285

Intersectionality
, 176–177, 196–197

Intimacy goals
, 238

ambivalent
, 250–252

Intracategorical approach
, 288–289

Invasive pressure
, 228

Involuntarily childless women
, 138, 273

Involuntary childlessness
, 50, 175

coping
, 60–65

databases
, 51

life-span perspectives
, 54–56

long-term impact of absence of children
, 55–56

psychological distress
, 51–54

psychosocial perspectives
, 56–60

See also Voluntary childlessness

Japan’s shifting motherhood norms
, 338

Japanese family
, 348

Japanese government
, 346

Knowledge of styles
, 103

Knowledge production
, 12, 15, 16, 21

Konashi-harassment
, 348

Labour force participation of women
, 284

Life course circumstances
, 161

Life longings
, 62–64

Life-span perspectives
, 54–56

Life-style preferences
, 161

Linear regression analysis
, 300

Lived experiences of childlessness
, 5, 66, 101–102, 153–154

Living Apart Together relationships (LAT-relationships)
, 241, 324

Living arrangements, ideal
, 244–245

Long-term impact of absence of children
, 55–56

Longitudinal survey study
, 58

‘Macho’ workplace cultures
, 266

Male childlessness
, 311

Marital status
, 293

Married intentionally childless couples, long-time
, 226

Married non-parents
, 138

Masculinities
, 262

Medical consequences of infertility
, 51–54

Meiji Civil Code
, 342

Meiji period, motherhood imperative and political economy of
, 341–343

Middle-class populations
, 101

Midlife
, 50, 51, 56, 59

Mixed methods
, 23, 334

‘Moderate Realos’
, 372

Modernized breadwinner model
, 366

Moral Failure: On the Impossible Demands of Morality
, 78

Moral identities
, 73

Moral luck
, 82–83

Motherhood
, 100, 127, 128–129

imperative of Meiji period
, 341–343

in Japan’s Tokugawa Period
, 338–341

Mothering
, 128

femininity
, 266

M-shaped curve of women’s employment
, 345

Multiple veto-points
, 362

Multivariate model
, 111, 118

Multivariate results
, 111–112

Narratives
, 73, 81

National law
, 364

National Organization for Non-Parents (NON)
, 2

National Survey of Families and Households
, 230

Navigating dating scene
, 247–249

Negative stereotyping
, 130, 131, 132

Negotiations
, 156

Neoliberalism
, 263

Nested logistic regression
, 105

Networking
, 155

Never-married childless older women

accomplishments
, 205–206

current and future roles
, 207–208

data analysis
, 201–202

methods
, 199–201

ways of knowing age
, 202–205

NGOs
, 372

‘Nimby acceptance’
, 231–232

No-win scenario
, 151

Non-childbearing preferences
, 102

Non-familial childcare place
, 370

Non-governmental institutions
, 367

Non-hegemonic workers
, 263

‘Non-mama’ harassment
, 346

Non-parenthood
, 156, 167

Non-wholehearted childlessness as Wanton-hood
, 76–79

Normality Assumption
, 220

Normative pronatalist ideology
, 129

Normative social categories
, 19

Occupational roles
, 287, 291

Occupational segregation by gender
, 284–285

Occupational status
, 267–269

Office of National Statistics (ONS)
, 178

Older age
, 195–196

Older Feminist Network
, 180

Older women
, 174–175, 196

Onna Daigaku
, 339, 342, 344

Organisations
, 262

organisational contexts influencing employment experiences
, 265–266

organisational logic
, 288

Overarching progress narrative
, 209

Oversampling techniques
, 120

Parental status
, 284, 286–290, 293, 297–298

Parenthood
, 120, 156, 220, 229, 322

Parenthood-motivation list
, 53

Parenting/parents
, 164

of adult married children
, 231–232

lifestyle
, 102

marriage
, 232

Personal rewards of
, 150

Part-time employed women with children
, 268

Partner(ship)

children
, 247

formation processes
, 238–239, 249

ideals
, 245–246

partner/husband influences
, 60–61

preferences
, 241, 243–244

Passive coping styles
, 61

Perceived exclusion
, 134

Perceptions of stigma
, 154

Permanent involuntary childlessness
, 59

Personal

autonomy
, 102

hardships
, 102

rewards of parent
, 150

Pervasive pronatalism
, 126–129

Physical and occupational segregation
, 265

Political economy of Meiji period
, 341–343

Population Policy Acceptance Study (PPAS)
, 311n1

Post-industrialism
, 361

Post-modern/critical theories
, 21

Post-pronatal mindset, pronatalist to
, 232

Post-socialist countries
, 334

Postponers
, 314, 317

female and male
, 319

Power relations and hierarchies
, 265

Pre-pregnant
, 87

Pressures or encouragement
, 148, 157–165

Pressures to having children
, 226

guilt-driven pressure
, 227

invasive pressure
, 228

relational pressure
, 226–227

shame-driven pressure
, 227

Prevailing pronatalism
, 126–129

Prioritisation
, 102

Professional achievement
, 100

Progress narrative
, 193, 199, 204, 209–210

Prominent pronatalist assumptions
, 220

Pronatalism
, 14, 103, 106, 219–221, 224, 264, 287

(bad) moral luck of
, 82–88

moral luck
, 82–83

prevailing and pervasive
, 126–129

and VC woman
, 83–88

Pronatalism: The Myth of Mom & Apple Pie
, 219–220

Pronatalist

bent
, 13

ideologies
, 98, 148, 156

long-held pronatalist assumption
, 232

norm
, 228

to post-pronatal mindset
, 232

societies
, 135

society
, 222

Pronatalist Destiny Assumption
, 220

Pronatalist Normality Assumption
, 221

Psychological distress
, 51

depression and distress
, 52–53

desire and regret
, 53–54

Psychosocial influences on cognitive coping strategies
, 62

Psychosocial perspectives, involuntary childlessness
, 56

relationships
, 58–59

self and identity
, 57–58

social expectations
, 59–60

Public childcare policies in Germany
, 362, 364

Qualitative methods
, 23

Quantitative methods
, 23

Rational choice
, 148

Reconceiving Women (1993)
, 221

Reflexivity
, 177

data collection
, 178–180

Regional variation in research interests
, 30

Regression analysis
, 298–299

linear regression analysis
, 300

Regret
, 53–54, 180–185

and ageing
, 184–185

half regrets
, 182–184

no regrets
, 181–182

‘Rejection’
, 60

Relational connection construction
, 61

Relational pressure
, 226–227

Relationships
, 58–59

couples in marital relationship
, 220

couples’ dyadic relationships
, 60

dissolution
, 254–255

formation process
, 250

initiation strategies
, 249–250

LAT-relationships
, 241, 324

social
, 59

Reliability
, 201

Religion
, 102

Religiosity
, 102

Reproductive preventative technologies
, 101

Reproductive technologies replacing adoption alternatives
, 347–348

Resolution
, 77

Resource accessibility
, 286

Resource acquisition
, 285–286

Retirement
, 208

‘Retreating to men’
, 60

Right-wing fundamentalists
, 371

Role congruity
, 286–290, 297–298

Role performance
, 286–289

Ryosai kenbo ideology
, 342, 345

Sampling techniques
, 156

Samurai warriors
, 340

Scarcity of voluntarily childless men
, 248

Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM)
, 289–290

Second Demographic Transition
, 20

Second-order volition
, 72, 77

Secure attachment
, 62

Seito magazine
, 342

Self
, 57–58

Self-employment
, 285

Self-regulatory strategy
, 62–64

Seven-step descriptive phenomenological method
, 55

Sexual orientation
, 293

Sexual revolution
, 23

Shame-driven pressure
, 227

Shogunate
, 339

Showa Era
, 343–345

Six-point Likert-scale
, 53

Social and cultural developments
, 219

Social capital
, 103, 106, 118, 155, 285–286

Social class
, 184

Social connectedness
, 135–139

Social connections
, 61

Social contract
, 187

Social devices
, 220

Social Devices for Impelling Women to Bear and Raise Children
, 220

Social exclusion
, 129–135

Social expectations
, 59–60

Social fields, childbearing preferences in
, 164–166

Social groupings
, 103

Social inclusion
, 135–139

Social networks
, 134, 285–286

impairment
, 137

Social relationships
, 59

Social science research
, 16

Social stigma
, 339, 340

Social support
, 135–139

Social-cultural norms
, 127

Socialisation
, 101

Societal acceptance
, 231–232, 234

fostering post-pronatal mindsets
, 233

intentionally childless marriage lack
, 219–222

from pronatalist to post-pronatal mindset
, 232

Societal messages
, 81

Societal role
, 291

Societal-level configurations
, 263–265

Societally hegemonic configurations
, 265

Societies
, 262

Socio-demographic variables
, 319

Socio-economic echelons
, 224

Sociology
, 102

Stem family (ie)
, 338–339, 342, 344, 348

Stereotyping
, 129–135

discrimination and
, 269–271

misperceptions and
, 224–226

Sterilisation
, 88

Sterility
, 310

Stigma
, 129–135, 149, 153–154

consciousness
, 132

Stigma and childlessness in Japan
, 338

childfree stigma and technological imperative in Heisei Era Japan
, 345–348

family and motherhood in Japan’s Tokugawa Period
, 338–341

motherhood imperative and political economy of Meiji period
, 341–343

Taisho and Showa Eras
, 343–345

Structural factors
, 98

Structural transformations
, 100

Structurally habitus
, 165

Stumbling on Happiness
, 230

Subjective realities
, 98

Subordinate femininity
, 263

Subsidiarity principle
, 364

Success
, 292–293

‘Super Moms’
, 151

Support networks
, 118

Surrogate motherhood
, 310

Sustained sub-replacement fertility
, 20

Symbolic capital
, 103, 107

Symbolism
, 265

Systematic literature review
, 14

Systems Of inequality
, 196

Systems-oriented theories
, 21

Tagesbetreuungsausbaugesetz (TAG)
, 365

Taisho Era
, 343–345

Team coding process
, 201

Technological imperative in Heisei Era Japan
, 345–348

Temporarily childless (TC)
, 105, 156

participants
, 157, 161

Temporary acceptance
, 231–232

Tentative categories
, 178

Tessman’s poignant evocation of worst moral dilemmas
, 79

Thematic coding for transcripts
, 201

Third-wave

feminism
, 221, 233–234

feminists
, 2

ideology
, 221

spirit
, 221

Timing partnership formation
, 246–247

Traditional Family Attitudes (TFA)
, 313

Traditional gender ideologies
, 151

Traditional male breadwinner family model
, 364

Traditional patriarchal families
, 135

‘Traditional’ life course transitions
, 198

Underperformance hypothesis
, 292–293

United front
, 229

‘Universal adult worker’ model
, 263

Unmanageable expectations
, 148

Unwomanly Conduct: The Challenges of Intentional Childlessness (1994)
, 218

‘Unwomen’
, 287

Upper-class populations
, 101

US Census Bureau (2014)
, 219

Velvet triangle
, 369

Veto players
, 362

Voluntarily childfree. See Voluntarily childless (VC)

Voluntarily childless (VC)
, 17, 72, 105, 218, 314

adults
, 102, 154

category
, 322

participants
, 157, 158, 161–162

people
, 33, 62, 310, 334

woman
, 75, 83–88, 132, 138, 239, 274–275

Voluntary childlessness
, 12, 17, 98, 101, 104, 149, 152, 153, 175

among men
, 329–332

coding categories
, 18

cross-tabulation of author location and theoretical framework
, 25

cross-tabulation of decade and method
, 24

main focus of articles
, 28–29

methodology
, 14–19, 23

number of articles publishing
, 19

politics of location
, 19–21

politics of representation
, 27–33

politics of research practices
, 21–27

theoretical frameworks
, 22

as topic of enquiry
, 13–14

See also Involuntary childlessness

Voluntary childlessness among men
, 329–332

Wanting to Want
, 73

intelligibility of choice
, 79–82

non-wholehearted childlessness as Wanton-hood
, 76–79

VC woman
, 75

Wanton-hood, non-wholehearted childlessness as
, 76–79

Washington Post
, 87

Ways of knowing age
, 202–205

Weekly Toyo Keizai magazine
, 348

Welfare organisations
, 372

Wholehearted counterstories
, 89–90

Wholeheartedness
, 78

Widowed men
, 225

Womanhood
, 221

Women
, 50, 51, 53, 100, 209, 238, 262, 284

ability
, 253

childbearing decisions
, 359–360

with children
, 269–270

decision
, 240

informal care work
, 196

lifestyle preferences
, 239

partner preferences
, 247

voluntary childlessness among
, 324, 326–328

Women without children
, 129–131, 138, 269–270

benefits of conforming to ideal worker stereotype
, 267–269

circumstances
, 125–126

discrimination and stereotyping
, 269–271

employment experiences among
, 266

gender influencing employment experiences of
, 262–263

individual performances of femininities without children
, 273–275

prevailing and pervasive pronatalism
, 126–129

in pronatalist society
, 128

social inclusion, connectedness and support
, 135–139

societal-level configurations influencing employment experiences of
, 263–265

stigma, stereotyping and social exclusion
, 129–135

work-life balance and access to employment benefits
, 271–273

workplace social interactions
, 273

Work-devotion schema
, 264

Work-life balance and access to employment benefits
, 271–273

Workplace

gender inequality
, 302

outcomes
, 286–289

social interactions
, 273

Prelims
Introduction: Childlessness through a Feminist Lens
Section I Theoretical Perspectives on Voluntary and Involuntary Childlessness
Chapter 1 From Deviant Choice to Feminist Issue: An Historical Analysis of Scholarship on Voluntary Childlessness (1920–2013)
Chapter 2 What Is It Like Being Involuntarily Childless? Searching for Ways of Understanding from a Psychological Perspective
Chapter 3 Wanting to Want: Constructing the Ambivalent Childless Self
Section II Structure, Agency and Childlessness
Chapter 4 Capital in Pronatalist Fields: Exploring the Influence of Economic, Social, Cultural and Symbolic Capital on Childbearing Habitus
Chapter 5 Social Inclusion, Connectedness and Support: Experiences of Women without Children in a Pronatalist Society
Chapter 6 ‘Join the Club’ or ‘Don’t Have Kids’? Exploring Contradictory Experiences, Pressures and Encouragement to Have Children in Pronatalist Social Fields
Section III Intersectional Perspectives on Childlessness
Chapter 7 Are Loneliness and Regret the Inevitable Outcomes of Ageing and Childlessness?
Chapter 8 Age Identity and Never-married Childless Older Women
Section IV Lived Experiences of Childlessness
Chapter 9 The Intentionally Childless Marriage
Chapter 10 Finding ‘Mr Right’? Childfree Women’s Partner Preferences
Chapter 11 Understanding the Employment Experiences of Women with No Children
Chapter 12 Gender Congruity, Childlessness and Success in Entrepreneurship: An Intersectional Bourdieusian Analysis
Section V National Perspectives on Childlessness
Chapter 13 Is There Voluntary Childlessness At All in Hungary?
Chapter 14 Stigma and Childlessness in Historical and Contemporary Japan
Chapter 15 The Effects of Childcare Arrangements on Childlessness in Germany
Postscript: Moving Forward Towards a Feminist Understanding of ‘Otherhood’
Index