Yeatman Sara E, Trinitapoli Jenny
Assistant Professor, Department of Health and Behavioral Sciences, University of Colorado at Denver, Tel: +1 303 556-3555.
Demogr Res. 2008 Oct 24;19(55):1851-1882. doi: 10.4054/DemRes.2008.19.55.
Despite the centrality of religion and fertility to life in rural Africa, the relationship between the two remains poorly understood. The study presented here uses unique integrated individual and congregational level data from rural Malawi to examine religious influences on contraceptive use. In this religiously diverse population, we find evidence that the particular characteristics of a congregation-leader's positive attitudes toward family planning and discussion of sexual morality, which do not fall along broad denominational lines-are more relevant than denominational categories for predicting women's contraceptive use. We further find evidence for a relationship between religious socialization and contraceptive behavior.
尽管宗教和生育能力在非洲农村生活中占据核心地位,但二者之间的关系仍鲜为人知。本文所呈现的研究使用了来自马拉维农村的独特的个体与教会层面的综合数据,以考察宗教对避孕措施使用的影响。在这个宗教信仰多样化的人群中,我们发现有证据表明,教会的特定特征——领袖对计划生育的积极态度以及对性道德的讨论,这些并非按照宽泛的教派界限划分——在预测女性避孕措施使用方面比教派类别更为重要。我们还发现了宗教社会化与避孕行为之间存在关联的证据。