Abstract: The
relationship between fertility and employment among women is a challenging
topic that requires further exploration, especially for developing countries
where the micro and macro evidence fails to paint a clear picture. This study
analyzes the two-way relationship between women’s employment and fertility in
Turkey using a hazard approach with piece-wise constant exponential modelling,
using data from the 2008 Turkey Demographic and Health Survey. To the best of
the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study that makes use of an event
history analysis to analyze this relationship within a developing country
context. Specifically, a separate analysis is made of the association between
the employment statuses of women in their first, second, third, and fourth and
higher order conceptions, and the association of fertility and its various
dimensions with entry and exit from employment. The findings suggest that a
two-way negative association exists between fertility and employment among
women in Turkey, with increasing intensities identified among some groups of
women. Our findings also cast light on how contextual changes related to the
incompatibility of the roles of worker and mother have transformed the
fertility-employment relationship in Turkey, in line with propositions of the
role incompatibility hypothesis.