Nobles Jenna, Frankenberg Elizabeth
University of California-Berkeley, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2009 Mar;50(1):16-30. doi: 10.1177/002214650905000102.
We use rich data from the Indonesia Family Life Survey to assess the relationship between mothers' access to social capital via participation in community activities and their children's health. We exploit the advantages of longitudinal data and community fixed effects to mitigate some of the concerns about spuriousness and reverse causality that predominate in this literature. We find that children from families with relatively low levels of human and financial capital fare better with respect to health status when their mothers are more active participants in community organizations. In fact, the association between maternal participation and child health is strong and positive only for children from relatively disadvantaged backgrounds, as measured by their mothers' educational and household economic resources. The results suggest that in poorer settings community involvement may benefit disadvantaged families, possibly by providing resources and information that would otherwise be inaccessible.
我们利用印度尼西亚家庭生活调查的丰富数据,来评估母亲通过参与社区活动获取社会资本与子女健康之间的关系。我们利用纵向数据和社区固定效应的优势,以缓解该文献中普遍存在的关于虚假性和反向因果关系的一些担忧。我们发现,当母亲更积极地参与社区组织时,人力和金融资本水平相对较低家庭的孩子在健康状况方面表现更好。事实上,仅对于来自相对弱势背景的孩子而言,母亲参与度与孩子健康之间的关联才是强烈且正向的,这种弱势背景是通过其母亲的教育程度和家庭经济资源来衡量的。结果表明,在较贫困的环境中,社区参与可能会使弱势家庭受益,这可能是通过提供那些原本无法获取的资源和信息来实现的。