Renne E P
Health Transition Centre, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT.
Stud Fam Plann. 1993 Nov-Dec;24(6 Pt 1):343-53.
This article investigates the influence of gender ideology on number of children wanted, son preference, family-size discussions and decision-making, and use of birth control in a rural Ekiti Yoruba village in southwestern Nigeria. Interview and survey data indicate that attitudes about these matters vary more with age than with sex, suggesting that both women and men subscribe to the prevailing gender ideology of male authority in matters of family size and composition. However, women and men differ about who decides family size, largely because the ideal of fathers' financial support of their children is sometimes belied by practice. The article concludes with a discussion of the strategies that husbands and wives employ to obtain their reproductive goals, and their implications for family planning programs in Nigeria.
本文探讨了性别意识形态对尼日利亚西南部埃基蒂约鲁巴族一个乡村地区生育意愿、重男轻女观念、家庭规模讨论与决策以及节育措施使用情况的影响。访谈和调查数据表明,在这些问题上的态度随年龄变化的差异大于随性别的差异,这表明在家庭规模和构成问题上,男性权威的主流性别意识形态得到了男性和女性的认同。然而,在谁决定家庭规模这一问题上,男性和女性存在分歧,这主要是因为父亲在经济上支持子女的理想状况有时与实际情况不符。文章最后讨论了丈夫和妻子为实现生育目标所采用的策略,以及这些策略对尼日利亚计划生育项目的影响。