Factors contributing to male childlessness from a social structural perspective
Wenqian Xu, Chunyan Kong, Fang Zhao

TL;DR
This study explores why some older men in rural China remain childless, focusing on how structural factors like geography and policies shape their life paths.
Contribution
The study introduces a life course perspective to understand how structural disadvantages and institutional constraints interact to cause male childlessness in rural China.
Findings
Structural disadvantages in early life, such as geographic constraints and education exclusion, limited marriage opportunities for older men.
The hukou system and weak rural welfare in early adulthood worsened economic hardship and caregiving burdens.
Midlife structural factors like the urban-rural dual system and sociocultural norms further limited marital prospects.
Abstract
Male childlessness in late adulthood is increasingly prevalent in rural China, raising concerns about later-life care and welfare sustainability. While research has examined individual predictors and macro-level conditions, little is known about how these factors interact within the broader structure-agency context. This study, guided by a life course perspective, explores the structural factors shaping childlessness among older men in a rural area of northern China. Drawing on the life stories of 13 childless older men, the study explores how timing, institutional constraints, and life pathway interdependencies affect marriage and childbearing prospects. Structural disadvantages in early life, such as geographic constraints and education exclusion, restricted marriage opportunities. In early adulthood, the hukou system and weak rural welfare reinforced economic hardship and caregiving…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsIntergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving · Family Dynamics and Relationships · Demographic Trends and Gender Preferences
