Publication | Closed Access
Life Course Perspectives on Women's Autonomy and Health Outcomes
223
Citations
21
References
1995
Year
Women EmpowermentReproductive HealthContemporary Northern IndiaAutonomySocial SciencesIntergenerational EquityGender StudiesLife Course PerspectivesGender EqualityPublic HealthFeminist HealthSocial InequalityDemographic ChangeFeminist TheoryNegative Demographic ConsequencesWomen's EmpowermentSociologyWomen's HealthDemographyLife Course
Gender inequality leads to negative demographic consequences in many societies. Patterns of household formation and inheritance strongly influence these consequences. Peasant societies of preindustrial northern Europe emphasized the conjugal bond, while intergenerational bonds were weak. The reverse is true in contemporary northern India. As a result, greater potential exists there for marginalizing women. The convergence of low autonomy due to youth as well as gender means that women's autonomy is at its lowest point during the peak of childbearing years. This has considerable implications for demographic and health outcomes in terms of poorer child survival, slower fertility decline, and poorer reproductive health.
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