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 Ingrid van Dijk . foto

Ingrid van Dijk

Universitetslektor

 Ingrid van Dijk . foto

Inequality in Child Mortality Persists Between Generations in the Netherlands, 1835–1919

Författare

  • Ingrid Kirsten van Dijk

Summary, in English

In historical the Netherlands, child mortality was distributed unequally between families and this inequality persisted across generations. Using family reconstitution data for the province of Zeeland (LINKS) containing over 200,000 children born 1835–1914, I show that mortality was higher among children under age 5 whose parents lost siblings under age 5. Intergenerational persistence was strongest from mothers to their children and particularly for mothers who lost siblings as infants in relation to mortality among their own infants. This intergenerational persistence of child mortality existed independently from socioeconomic differences in infant and child mortality. Inequalities accumulated, as child mortality was highest for low socioeconomic status (SES) children whose parents originated from high-mortality, low-SES families. Intergenerational transmission in child mortality persisted even when child mortality had declined in the early twentieth century.

Avdelning/ar

  • Centrum för ekonomisk demografi
  • Ekonomisk-historiska institutionen

Publiceringsår

2025-11-04

Språk

Engelska

Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie

European Review of Economic History

Dokumenttyp

Artikel i tidskrift

Förlag

Oxford University Press

Ämne

  • Economic History

Aktiv

Epub

Projekt

  • Ett långt och hälsosamt liv? Mekanismer för hälsosamt åldrande hos svenska och nederländska långlivade familjer (1813-2021)
  • Relative Health: Long-Run Inequalities in Health and Survival Between Families and Across Generations

ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt

  • ISSN: 1474-0044