Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)

It has previously been shown that infant mortality clusters in a subset of families, a phenomenon which was observed in historical populations as well as contemporary developing countries. A transmission of death clustering across generations has also been shown in Belgium, but it is unknown whether...

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Main Authors: Luciana Quaranta, Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Institute of Social History 2018-12-01
Series:Historical Life Course Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10622/23526343-2018-00014?locatt=view:master
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author Luciana Quaranta
Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
author_facet Luciana Quaranta
Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
author_sort Luciana Quaranta
collection DOAJ
description It has previously been shown that infant mortality clusters in a subset of families, a phenomenon which was observed in historical populations as well as contemporary developing countries. A transmission of death clustering across generations has also been shown in Belgium, but it is unknown whether such effects are specific to the studied context or are also found in other areas. The current article introduces a special issue devoted to analysing intergenerational transmissions of infant mortality across the maternal line in Belgium, the Netherlands, northern and southern Sweden, and Norway. Taking advantage of the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS), the five empirical studies created datasets for analysis and ran statistical models using exactly the same programs, which are also published within the special issue. These works are the first set of studies using the IDS on several databases for comparative purposes. Consistent results across the studied contexts were shown: transfers of infant mortality across the maternal line were seen in all five areas. In addition, the works have shown that there are large advantages of adopting the IDS for historical demographic research. The structure has in fact allowed researchers to conduct studies which were fully comparable, transparent and replicable.
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spelling doaj-art-d401da349acc47b49ba83ac77fa1d0e32025-02-02T13:04:05ZengInternational Institute of Social HistoryHistorical Life Course Studies2352-63432018-12-017110Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)Luciana Quaranta0Hilde Leikny Sommerseth1Lund UniversityUiT - The Arctic University of NorwayIt has previously been shown that infant mortality clusters in a subset of families, a phenomenon which was observed in historical populations as well as contemporary developing countries. A transmission of death clustering across generations has also been shown in Belgium, but it is unknown whether such effects are specific to the studied context or are also found in other areas. The current article introduces a special issue devoted to analysing intergenerational transmissions of infant mortality across the maternal line in Belgium, the Netherlands, northern and southern Sweden, and Norway. Taking advantage of the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS), the five empirical studies created datasets for analysis and ran statistical models using exactly the same programs, which are also published within the special issue. These works are the first set of studies using the IDS on several databases for comparative purposes. Consistent results across the studied contexts were shown: transfers of infant mortality across the maternal line were seen in all five areas. In addition, the works have shown that there are large advantages of adopting the IDS for historical demographic research. The structure has in fact allowed researchers to conduct studies which were fully comparable, transparent and replicable.http://hdl.handle.net/10622/23526343-2018-00014?locatt=view:masterInfant mortalityIntergenerational transmissionsIntermediate Data StructureHistorical demographyLongitudinal data
spellingShingle Luciana Quaranta
Hilde Leikny Sommerseth
Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)
Historical Life Course Studies
Infant mortality
Intergenerational transmissions
Intermediate Data Structure
Historical demography
Longitudinal data
title Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)
title_full Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)
title_fullStr Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)
title_full_unstemmed Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)
title_short Introduction: Intergenerational Transmissions of Infant Mortality using the Intermediate Data Structure (IDS)
title_sort introduction intergenerational transmissions of infant mortality using the intermediate data structure ids
topic Infant mortality
Intergenerational transmissions
Intermediate Data Structure
Historical demography
Longitudinal data
url http://hdl.handle.net/10622/23526343-2018-00014?locatt=view:master
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