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Premchand Dommaraju Victor Agadjanian Scott Yabiku 《Population research and policy review》2008,27(4):477-495
This study examines the effect of caste on child mortality and maternal health care utilization in rural India using data
from the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-2) carried out during 1998–1999. Results from multilevel discrete-time hazard
models indicate that, net of individual-level and community-level controls, children belonging to low castes have higher risks
of death and women belonging to low castes have lower rates of antenatal and delivery care utilization than children and women
belonging to upper castes. At the same time, the controls account for most of the differences within the low castes. Further
analysis shows that the mortality disadvantage of low castes is more pronounced in poorer districts. These results highlight
the need to target low caste members in the provision of maternal and child health services. 相似文献
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Victor Agadjanian Premchand Dommaraju Lesia Nedoluzhko 《Journal of Population Research》2013,30(3):197-211
Declining marriage and fertility rates following the collapse of state socialism have been the subject of numerous studies in Central and Eastern Europe. More recent literature has focused on marriage and fertility dynamics in the period of post-crisis political stabilization and economic growth. However, relatively little research on marriage and fertility has dealt with the Central Asian part of the post-socialist world. We use survey and published data from Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, two multiethnic countries with differing paths of post-crisis recovery, to examine overall and ethnic-specific trends in entry into marriage and fertility. We find that in both countries rates of entry into marriage continued to decline throughout post-crisis years. By contrast, fertility rose, and this rise was greater in the more prosperous Kazakhstan. However, we also detect considerable ethnic variations in fertility trends which we situate within the ethnopolitical and ethnodemographic contexts of both countries. 相似文献
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Economic condition and women’s status have been considered important elements in understanding fertility change. In this study,
we examine their influence on North–South differences in parity-specific fertility intentions and births in India using the
National Family Health Survey (NFHS-2) conducted in 1998–1999. The results show the persistence of spatial variations in fertility
intentions and births, net of economic and women’s status factors. The influence of these factors is more pronounced in the
high fertility region. This study argues that changes in fertility desires and their actualization may be better understood
when situated within the broader socio-political context. 相似文献
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This study contributes to the literature on demographic adjustments to societal crises by examining ethnic-specific probabilities of having first, second, and third marital births in late-twentieth-century Kazakhstan. Discrete-time logit models, employing data from the 1995 and 1999 Kazakhstan Demographic and Health Surveys, are fitted. The results show that the probability of a first birth responded to societal cataclysms of the post-Soviet transition, but this response was most manifest and enduring in the ethnic group that had been most demographically advanced and that also found itself most politically and economically vulnerable. While ethnic differences in the probability of second and third births were generally more pronounced than in the probabilities of first birth, the pace of their post-Soviet decline was relatively uniform across all ethnic groups. 相似文献
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The unique cultural and political history of Central Asia has produced intriguing ethnic variations in union formation. We use data from a survey of 1,535 young adults conducted in 2005 in northern Kyrgyzstan to examine ethnic patterns of entry into marriage versus cohabitation. To reflect the historic-cultural and political realities of Kyrgyzstan, we subdivide ethnic Kyrgyz into two categories based on the degree of linguistic Russification??more-Russified Kyrgyz and less-Russified Kyrgyz??and compare them to each other and to respondents of European origin. The results of the multinomial discrete-time logit models show significant differences among the three groups. Thus, Europeans were most likely to enter cohabitation whereas less-Russified Kyrgyz were least likely to do so, net of other factors. The three groups were lined up in the converse order with respect to probability of entering marriage, but upon breakdown by gender this ordering was present only among women. In contrast, among men, more-Russified Kyrgyz were less likely to marry than both less-Russified Kyrgyz and Europeans. We interpret these findings in light of long-term historic-cultural and demographic distinctions as well as more recent politically induced cleavages in Kyrgyzstan. 相似文献
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