Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- one Introduction: the construction of teenage pregnancy as a social problem
- Part One Liberal welfare states
- Part Two Continental and Scandinavian welfare states
- Part Three Transition states
- Statistical appendix: Teenage fertility in OECD countries
- Index
five - Approaches to teenage motherhood in Québec, Canada
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on contributors
- one Introduction: the construction of teenage pregnancy as a social problem
- Part One Liberal welfare states
- Part Two Continental and Scandinavian welfare states
- Part Three Transition states
- Statistical appendix: Teenage fertility in OECD countries
- Index
Summary
Introduction
A number of recent Québec policy initiatives in such areas as vocational integration, school attendance, social services and family support services have targeted young mothers under the age of 20. The circumstances of those young women contrast sharply with those of older women, who are opting to start a family later or even forego children altogether. Indeed, the low fertility rate among Québec women stirs regular debates. Why then, does early parenthood pose a problem in need of special attention?
This is the question that this chapter seeks to address. It provides a discussion of early pregnancy and motherhood as a ‘social problem’ through an exploration of the literature and of the latest statistics. The analysis will be set in the broader framework of changing social policies in Canada and Québec. It will be shown that early motherhood cuts across a set of specific issues and circumstantial factors, creating a novel situation that largely accounts for the interest it creates.
Teenage pregnancy and motherhood: a social problem?
Does becoming pregnant in adolescence and keeping the child represent a problem? The literature on teenage pregnancy and motherhood published year after year yields no simple answer to this question.
Three lines of argument fuel the debates over teenage pregnancy and motherhood in Québec. First, there is the two-pronged debate between those who interpret the statistics as a cause for concern on the ground that the situation shows no signs of significant subsiding over time and those who emphasise other survey findings that reveal a set of problem behaviours associated with this phenomenon. Second, questions arise as to causality and consequences, that is, are these events the cause of subsequent problems or simply occurrences along a predetermined walk of life? Third, there are attempts to allocate rights and responsibilities, particularly those that fall to the adolescent female and society. This discussion is part of the broader process of redefining family and work values in Canadian and Québec society, which is reflected in the evolution of social policy.
Alarming statistics
The Canadian province of Québec has a total population of 7.5 million inhabitants. In 2001, close to 9,400 females under the age of 20 became pregnant, with the older age group (18-19) accounting for most of those pregnancies (ISQ, 2003).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- When Children Become ParentsWelfare State Responses to Teenage Pregnancy, pp. 91 - 114Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2006