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Field: Demographic Trends and Gender Preferences

Attitudes Toward Wife Beating

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Manju Rani, Sekhar Bonu

Journal: Journal of Interpersonal Violence 2008
Year:
Citations: 178

Using demographic and health surveys conducted between 1998 and 2001 from seven countries (Armenia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Kazakhstan, Nepal, and Turkey), the study found that acceptance of wife beating ranged from 29% in Nepal, to 57% in India (women only), and from 26% in Kazakhstan, to 56% ...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender Preferences
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NGO-promoted microcredit programs and women's empowerment in rural Bangladesh: quantitative and qualitative evidence.

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Ruhul Amin, Stan Becker, Abdul Bayes

Journal: PubMedYear: 1998Citations: 176

Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in rural Bangladesh are reaching out to poor women with collateral-free credit programs aimed at both alleviating poverty and increasing women's status. The present study investigated the hypothesis that participation in credit-related activities by NGO credit me...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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Living with infertility: Experiences among urban slum populations in Bangladesh

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Nahar Papreen, Anjali Sharma, Keith Sabin, Lutfa Begum et al.

Journal: Reproductive Health MattersYear: 2000Citations: 169

AbstractAbstractThis paper explores the perceived causes of infertility, treatment-seeking for infertility and the consequences of childlessness, particularly for women, among a predominantly Muslim population in urban slums of Dhaka in Bangladesh. In-depth interviews were conducted with 60 women an...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender PreferencesOpen Access
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CHILD MARRIAGE IN BANGLADESH: TRENDS AND DETERMINANTS

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S. M. Mostafa Kamal, Che Hashim Hassan, Gazi Mahabubul Alam, Ying Yang

Journal: Journal of Biosocial ScienceYear: 2014Citations: 165

This study examines the trends and determinants of child marriage among women aged 20-49 in Bangladesh. Data were extracted from the last six nationally representative Demographic and Health Surveys conducted during 1993-2011. Simple cross-tabulation and multivariate binary logistic regression analy...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender Preferences
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Gender inequalities in health and wellbeing across the first two decades of life: an analysis of 40 low-income and middle-income countries in the Asia-Pacific region

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Elissa Kennedy, Gerda Binder, Karen Humphries-Waa, Tom Tidhar et al.

Journal: The Lancet Global HealthYear: 2020Citations: 161

BACKGROUND: By adulthood, gender inequalities in health and wellbeing are apparent. Yet, the timing and nature of gender inequalities during childhood and adolescence are less clear. We describe the emergence of gender inequalities in health and wellbeing across the first two decades of life. METHOD...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender PreferencesOpen Access
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Bangladesh e-Journal of Sociology

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Yesmin Akhter, Mohammad Zakaria Mohaimin, Mustafa Murshed, Peter Ezeah et al.

Year: 2012Citations: 158
Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender Preferences
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Determinants of Reproductive Change in a Traditional Society: Evidence from Matlab, Bangladesh

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James F. Phillips, Ruth Simmons, Michael Koenig, J. Chakraborty

Journal: Studies in Family PlanningYear: 1988Citations: 158

A decade has elapsed since a project was launched in Matlab, Bangladesh to test the hypothesis that contraceptive services can induce and sustain fertility decline in a rural traditional population. The demographic impact of this project has been pronounced, lending support to the view that supply-s...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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The Determinants of Reproductive Change in Bangladesh: Success in a Challenging Environment

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John Cleland

Journal: DigitalGeorgetown (Georgetown University Library)Year: 1994Citations: 157

Demographic trends have taken many surprising forms over the last 30 years, but none have aroused such surprise, even incredulity, as recent events in Bangladesh. Although this country remains one of the poorest and least developed of all nations, there is mounting evidence of a steep decline in fer...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender Preferences
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Family Planning and Women’s and Children’s Health: Long-Term Consequences of an Outreach Program in Matlab, Bangladesh

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Shareen Joshi, Tanja Schultz

Journal: DemographyYear: 2012Citations: 154

We analyze the impact of an experimental maternal and child health and family planning program that was established in Matlab, Bangladesh, in 1977. Village data from 1974, 1982, and 1996 suggest that program villages experienced a decline in fertility of about 17 %. Household data from 1996 confirm ...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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Couples’ reports of household decision-making and the utilization of maternal health services in Bangladesh

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William T. Story, Sarah Burgard

Journal: Social Science & MedicineYear: 2012Citations: 152

This study examines the association between maternal health service utilization and household decision-making in Bangladesh. Most studies of the predictors of reproductive health service use focus on women’s reports; however, men are often involved in these decisions as well. Recently, studies have ...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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Hepatitis B and the Case of the Missing Women

Verified

Emily Oster

Journal: Journal of Political EconomyYear: 2005Citations: 150

In many Asian countries the ratio of male to female population is higher than in the West: as high as 1.07 in China and India, and even higher in Pakistan. A number of authors (most notably Amartya Sen) have suggested that this imbalance reflects excess female mortality and have argued that as many ...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender Preferences
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Early marriage and early childbearing in South Asia: trends, inequalities, and drivers from 2005 to 2018

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Samuel Scott, Phuong Hong Nguyen, Sumanta Neupane, Priyanjana Pramanik et al.

Journal: Annals of the New York Academy of SciencesYear: 2020Citations: 143

Early marriage (EM) and early childbearing (ECB) have far-reaching consequences. This study describes the prevalence, trends, inequalities, and drivers of EM and ECB in South Asia using eight rounds of Demographic and Health Survey data across 13 years. We report the percentage of ever-married women...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child HealthOpen Access
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Women and kinship: comparative perspectives on gender in South and South-East Asia

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Leela Dube

Journal: Choice Reviews OnlineYear: 1998Citations: 143

<p>This is the first sustained effort to compare South and South-East Asia in respect of the situation of women. Arguing that kinship systems provide an important context in which gender relations are located, the study overlooks at three types of kinship system, found in their carious forms i...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender PreferencesOpen Access
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An Increase in the Sex Ratio of Births to India‐born Mothers in England and Wales: Evidence for Sex‐Selective Abortion

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Sylvie Dubuc, David Coleman

Journal: Population and Development ReviewYear: 2007Citations: 142

Male preference in many Asian cultures results in discriminatory practices against females, including neglect and infanticide. This preference, together with the availability of prenatal sex determination and sex‐selective abortion, has led to an increase in sex ratios at birth in China, India, and ...

Social SciencesGender StudiesDemographic Trends and Gender Preferences
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The causes of stalling fertility transitions

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John Bongaarts

Year: 2005Citations: 136

An examination of fertility trends in countries with multiple DHS surveys found that in the 1990s fertility stalled in mid-transition in seven countries: Bangladesh, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Ghana, Kenya, Peru, and Turkey. An analysis of trends in the determinants of fertility revealed a system...

Health SciencesMedicinePediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
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