RT Journal Article T1 Fertility and contraception: The experience of Spanish women born in the first half of the twentieth century A1 Requena, Miguel A1 Reher Sullivan, David Sven A1 Sanz Gimeno, Alberto AB New data based on retrospective interviews with older informants enable us to review the history of contraceptive use among Spanish women over much of the twentieth century. This source is unique because it includes cohorts of women whose reproductive lives took place before, during, and after the baby boom. Traditional contraceptive methods (withdrawal and periodic abstinence) were central to the experience of the first set of women, while the last set made full use of modern as well as some traditional methods. For the first cohorts, traditional methods spearheaded the historic decline in fertility, while among the last set of women modern methods led to a precipitous decline towards the belowreplacement fertility that continues in Spain today. There is no evidence that the modest increases in fertility during the baby boom in Spain were the result of a decline in the use of contraception among married women. PB Taylor & Francis SN 0032-4728 YR 2022 FD 2022 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/91661 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/91661 LA eng NO Miguel Requena, David Reher & Alberto Sanz-Gimeno (2023) Fertility and contraception: The experience of Spanish women born in the first half of the twentieth century, Population Studies, 77:1, 153-162, DOI: 10.1080/00324728.2022.2127858 DS Docta Complutense RD 8 abr 2025