Brazil's Girl Power: <i>National Geographic</i> Takes A Look At The Drop In Fertility Rate (PHOTOS)

PHOTOS: How Soap Operas And Female Empowerment Helped Bring Down Brazil's Fertility Rate
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In the September 2011 issue of National Geographic, Cynthia Gorney examines how Brazil's fertility rate has plunged below replacement levels, and provides a how-to guide for bringing down a developing nation's fertility rate without government intervention. Remarkably, in a country where abortion is largely illegal and the government doesn't promote birth control, many women from all social classes have made raising children a lower priority. As Cynthia Gorney's report states:

[The] new Brazilian fertility rate is below the level at which a population replaces itself. It is lower than the two-children-per-woman fertility rate in the United States. In the largest nation in Latin America—a 191-million-person country where the Roman Catholic Church dominates, abortion is illegal (except in rare cases), and no official government policy has ever promoted birth control—family size has dropped so sharply and so insistently over the past five decades that the fertility rate graph looks like a playground slide.

And it's not simply wealthy and professional women who have stopped bearing multiple children in Brazil. There's a common perception that the countryside and favelas, as Brazilians call urban slums, are still crowded with women having one baby after another—but it isn't true. At the demographic center Carvalho helped found, located four hours away in the city of Belo Horizonte, researchers have tracked the decline across every class and region of Brazil. Over some weeks of talking to Brazilian women recently, I met schoolteachers, trash sorters, architects, newspaper reporters, shop clerks, cleaning ladies, professional athletes, high school girls, and women who had spent their adolescence homeless; almost every one of them said a modern Brazilian family should include two children, ideally a casal, or couple, one boy and one girl. Three was barely plausible. One might well be enough. In a working-class neighborhood on the outskirts of Belo Horizonte, an unmarried 18-year-old affectionately watched her toddler son one evening as he roared his toy truck toward us; she loved him very much, the young woman said, but she was finished with childbearing. The expression she used was one I'd heard from Brazilian women before: "A fábrica está fechada." The factory is closed.

The full article by Cynthia Gorney appears in the September 2011 issue of National Geographic magazine, on newsstands now.

See the full gallery by photographer John Stanmeyer here.

See photos of women in Brazil below:

Brazil's Girl Power
(01 of07)
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The Shrinking Family: The seven children of 61-year-old Maria do Livramento Braz (left, seated in their midst) of Rio are a reminder of Brazil's once high fertility rate. The number of kids per woman has plummeted since the 1960s. Working-class families now aspire to the middle-class lifestyle -- and family size -- of Maria Corrêa de Oliveira (right, seated), a Rio psychoanalyst. She and her husband have only Henrique, 8, and Diana, 12. (© John Stanmeyer/National Geographic)
(02 of07)
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Ninety percent of female characters in the average novela have just one child or none, which may have influenced Brazilian women to desire smaller families. The scripts didn't intentionally encourage low fertility. Early novela writers sought to subtly undermine the dictatorship that ran Brazil until 1985, using story lines that critiqued traditional values and empowered women. (© John Stanmeyer/National Geographic)
(03 of07)
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Pessoa watches the soap operas nightly; here, she's glued to Ti-ti-ti with her husband and sister. (© John Stanmeyer/National Geographic)
(04 of07)
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Each morning Pessoa dresses up for her hour-long bus commute; she's working hard to take charge of her own future. (© John Stanmeyer/National Geographic)
(05 of07)
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Because sexual harassment persists in Brazil's machismo culture, Rio's subway offers females-only cars, where a guard keeps men out. (© John Stanmeyer/National Geographic)
(06 of07)
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A Recife activist participates in a vigil demanding an end to violence against women. (© John Stanmeyer/National Geographic)
(07 of07)
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Photos are in the September 2011 issue of National Geographic magazine, on newsstands now. (© National Geographic)

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