a University of Oslo.
Popul Stud (Camb). 2003 Nov;57(3):285-301. doi: 10.1080/0032472032000137817.
This study makes use of the National Family Health Survey of 1998-99 to investigate whether differences in women's autonomy can explain much of the relationship between education and contraceptive use among married Indian women with at least one child. The analyses show that a woman's education does not influence her contraceptive use through a strengthening of her position in relation to that of men, but that the inclusion of a simple indicator of her general knowledge reduces education effects appreciably. Further, the average educational level of other women in the census-enumeration area has an effect on a woman's contraceptive use above and beyond that of her own education. This effect cannot be explained by the specific indicators of autonomy, but can to some extent be explained by the son preference of the community. The latter is a more general autonomy indicator that may also pick up other contextual factors.
本研究利用 1998-99 年全国家庭健康调查数据,考察了妇女自主权的差异是否在很大程度上解释了印度已婚、至少育有一孩的妇女中,教育程度与避孕措施使用之间的关系。分析结果表明,女性的教育程度并没有通过增强其在与男性关系中的地位来影响其避孕措施的使用,而是通过纳入一个简单的通用知识指标,大大降低了教育程度的影响。此外,普查区中其他女性的平均教育水平对女性避孕措施的使用产生了影响,超出了自身教育水平的影响。这种影响不能用自主权的具体指标来解释,但在一定程度上可以用社区的男孩偏好来解释。后者是一个更普遍的自主权指标,也可能包括其他背景因素。