Journal ArticleUnknown
Women's Education and the Timing of Marriage and Childbearing in the Next Generation: Evidence from Rural Bangladesh
Author Affiliations
Columbia University, Temple University, Academy for Educational Development
Published InStudies in Family Planning
Year2007
Citations117
Abstract
In traditional settings where early marriage and early childbearing persist, decisions about age at marriage are often made by parents, and mothers-in-law tend to have considerable influence in hastening the initiation of childbearing. This study analyzes data from a 2002 survey in six villages in rural Bangladesh to test the hypothesis that daughters of women with more education marry later and that daughters-in-law of more educated women initiate childbearing at a slower rate. Using Cox proportional hazard models, we find significant associations between the educational level of mothers and the age at marriage of their daughters and between the educational level of mothers-in-law and the timing offirst birth among their daughters-in-law, although the association between the former attenuates when controlling…
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