Aksha Centre for Equity and Wellbeing, Mumbai, India.
Independent Researcher, and Formerly Dasra, Mumbai, India.
J Adolesc Health. 2022 Mar;70(3S):S78-S85. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.07.005.
Marriage without meaningful consent persists in India, yet early marriage programs have rarely addressed consent, and research on the practice and its consequences for married life is limited. This study explores how consent in marriage decisions affects married life, specifically, agency, gender attitudes, spousal communication, contraception, and marital violence outcomes.
A subset of 1991 married girls and young women was drawn from a 2018 state-representative survey of adolescents and youth aged 15-21 years in Jharkhand. We compared outcomes between those in self-arranged marriages (n = 392), those in semi-arranged marriages who were acquainted with their husbands before marriage (n = 612), and those in fully parent-arranged marriages with no premarital contact (n = 995). Logistic regression analyses identify associations between marriage decision-making and outcomes of interest, controlling for confounding sociodemographic factors.
Compared with girls whose marriages were self-arranged, those in both fully parent- and semi-arranged marriages were less likely, respectively, to make household decisions (odds ratios [OR], .37 and .60), hold egalitarian gender role attitudes (OR, .48 and .66), uphold girls' rights (OR, .41 and .48), communicate with their husbands (OR, .48 and .64), and practice contraception (OR, .51 and .67). Those in fully family-arranged marriages also had less freedom of movement (OR, .64) and were less likely to express self-efficacy (OR, .64). Marital violence was unrelated to marriage arrangements.
Self-arranged marriage is associated with more positive outcomes than family-arranged ones, including semi-arranged ones, but marriage arrangements are unrelated with marital violence. Findings reaffirm the need to breakdown prevailing patriarchal norms and promote girls' right to meaningful, "free and full consent".
在印度,没有真正同意的婚姻仍然存在,但早期婚姻方案很少涉及同意问题,而且关于这种做法及其对婚后生活影响的研究也很有限。本研究探讨了婚姻决策中的同意如何影响婚后生活,具体而言,影响了能动性、性别态度、夫妻沟通、避孕和婚姻暴力的结果。
从 2018 年对贾坎德邦 15-21 岁青少年和青年的一项州代表性调查中抽取了 1991 年已婚女孩和年轻妇女的一个子集。我们比较了自行安排婚姻(n=392)、婚前与丈夫相识的半安排婚姻(n=612)和完全父母安排婚姻且无婚前接触的婚姻(n=995)中这些结果之间的差异。逻辑回归分析确定了婚姻决策与感兴趣的结果之间的关联,同时控制了混杂的社会人口因素。
与自行安排婚姻的女孩相比,完全由父母和半安排婚姻安排的女孩在分别做出家庭决策(优势比 [OR],.37 和.60)、持有平等性别角色态度(OR,.48 和.66)、维护女孩权利(OR,.41 和.48)、与丈夫沟通(OR,.48 和.64)和使用避孕措施(OR,.51 和.67)的可能性较小。完全由家庭安排的婚姻中的女孩行动自由也较小(OR,.64),自我效能感较低(OR,.64)。婚姻暴力与婚姻安排无关。
与家庭安排的婚姻相比,自行安排的婚姻与更多积极的结果相关,包括半安排的婚姻,但婚姻安排与婚姻暴力无关。这些发现重申了需要打破普遍存在的父权规范,并促进女孩获得有意义的“自由和充分同意”的权利。