Brandon L. Crawford, PhD

Assistant Professor of Applied Health Science


Curriculum vitae



Department of Applied Health Science

School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington



Migrant Generations and Abortion Circumstances: Assessing Latinxs' Abortion Attitudes in the US*


Journal article


Xiana Bueno, María S. Montenegro, Wen‐Juo Lo, Danny Valdez, Brandon L. Crawford, R. Turner, K. Jozkowski
Sociological inquiry, 2023

Semantic Scholar DOI
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Bueno, X., Montenegro, M. S., Lo, W. J., Valdez, D., Crawford, B. L., Turner, R., & Jozkowski, K. (2023). Migrant Generations and Abortion Circumstances: Assessing Latinxs' Abortion Attitudes in the US*. Sociological Inquiry.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Bueno, Xiana, María S. Montenegro, Wen‐Juo Lo, Danny Valdez, Brandon L. Crawford, R. Turner, and K. Jozkowski. “Migrant Generations and Abortion Circumstances: Assessing Latinxs' Abortion Attitudes in the US*.” Sociological inquiry (2023).


MLA   Click to copy
Bueno, Xiana, et al. “Migrant Generations and Abortion Circumstances: Assessing Latinxs' Abortion Attitudes in the US*.” Sociological Inquiry, 2023.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{xiana2023a,
  title = {Migrant Generations and Abortion Circumstances: Assessing Latinxs' Abortion Attitudes in the US*},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {Sociological inquiry},
  author = {Bueno, Xiana and Montenegro, María S. and Lo, Wen‐Juo and Valdez, Danny and Crawford, Brandon L. and Turner, R. and Jozkowski, K.}
}

Abstract

This study examines how Latinx migrant generation and the circumstances of abortion may be linked to attitudes toward abortion legality among a sample of U.S.-Latinx adults. Using Confirmatory Factor Analysis and Multiple-Indicators Multiple-Causes modeling, we found that abortion attitudes across different migrant generations are sensitive to circumstances motivating the abortion. We did not find significant differences across migrant generations for generally more endorsed circumstances, such as when the woman's health is at risk or when the pregnancy occurs as a result of rape. However, second and third generations were more inclined to endorse legal abortion than first-generation for generally less endorsed circumstances, such as low income, being unpartnered, not wanting (more) children, or contraception failure. The social context in which one is raised (i.e., the United States for migrants' descendants or the country of birth for the first-generation migrants) plays a role in shaping abortion attitudes regarding the less endorsed social-related circumstances but not for more endorsed circumstances. Further research should consider the inner heterogeneity of the Latinx population as well as the multiple contexts of abortion.

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