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Native-immigrant marriage differentials in Iran: Comparative study of marriage behaviors of Afghan immigrants and Iranians

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Abbasi Shavazi, Mohammad
Sadeghi, Rasoul

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Population Association of Tehran

Abstract

This paper explores native-immigrant marriage differentials in Iran. Employing secondary analysis of aggregate and individual data from the Iran 2006 Census, timing of marriage (Singulate Mean Age at Marriage) and proportions ever married for Afghans migrants and and the native born were compared. Then, the native-immigrant marriage differentials among the youth were explained within the structuraland cultural adaptation framework. The result indicates a significant difference in marriage behavior between Afghan immigrants and Iranians. Afghans get married at young age and ealier than Iranians. These differences have been reduced for the second generation Afghans, and there is an evidence of convergence of marriage patterns of the second-generation Afghans towards Iranian marriage patterns. Controlling for socio-economic characteristics in multivariate analyses demonstrate that marriage differentials between immigrants and Iranian-native population can largely, though not in full, be explained by low structural adaptation of Afghans or due to their unequal socio-economic situations. The remaining differentials particularly for first generation Afghans may be explained by different marriage markets as well as cultural factors. Overall, this paper demonstrates that native-immigrant differentials in socio-econmic characteristics (marriage possibility and conditions), different marriage maket dynamics (accessibility) as well as cultural differences (meaning and desirability of marriage) have led to different marriage behaviors of Afghans as compared with Iranians

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Journal of Population Association of Iran

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2037-12-31
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