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Home > Publications > Publications on sale > Fertility Transition in South Asia
Fertility Transition in South Asia |
This compendium of nineteen chapters, written by South Asia scholars and international authorities in the field of population, provides an overview of a range of issues surrounding fertility change in SOuth Asia over the past decade. In the first section of the book, the latest levels and trends in fertility in individual countries are covered. The quality of data is compared and discussed with the aim of clarifying fertility trends in the region as a whole. The section provides an authoritative data source for those interested in pursuing demographic analyses for South Asia as it enters the twenty-first century. The second section presents explanations for the contrasting onset, pace, and differentials in fertility declines experienced by countries in the region. Authors examine a range of alternative explanatory factors, emphasizing issues such as the causal role of gender systems, son preference, linguistic and regional boundaries, and development levels. The viewpoints presented here provide a range of competing theories on the South Asia fertility transition, which will be of particular value to sociologists, historians and all those interested in comparative research for the region. The concluding section examines the role of policies in the South Asia fertility transition. Policies designed to reduce fertility were developed and launched in this region long before other regions in the world. In particular, family planning programmes were initiated in South Asia. In these final chapters, authors review the outcome of experiments conducted in settings where demand for family planning was constrained by pro-natalist social institutions, and where services were supplied to test the capacity of programmes to foster reproductive change. This section will be of particular interest to those managing reproductive health programmes, as well as to those researching the role of politics and policies in poulation trends. Zeba Ayesha Sathar is Deputy Representative, Population Council Pakistan Office, and Chief of Research, Pakistan Institute of Development Economics. 2001 - 434p. £36 (£48 to non members) |
Table of Contents
Introduction
Zeba A. Sathar and James F. Phillips
Part I: Fertility Levels and Trends
Levels and Trends in Fertility and Mortality in South Asia: A Review of Recent Evidence
Andrew Kantner and Shi-Jen He
Birth Rate Trends in India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Pakistan: A Long Comparative View
Tim Dyson
Comparison of Fertility Estimates from India's Sample Registration System and the 1992-1993 National Family Health Survey
R. L. Narasimhan, Robert D. Retherford, Vinod Mishra, Fred Arnold, and T. K. Roy
Fertility Decline in Nepal
Martine Collumbien, Ian M. Timaeus, and Laxmi Acharya
Fertility Decline in Sri Lanka: Could Fertility Now Be at about Replacement Level?
C. M. Langford
Family Planning in Pakistan: A Turning Point
Abdul Hakim and Peter C. Miller
Trends in Fertility and Contraceptive use in Bangladesh
Juliet McEachran and Ian Diamond
Part II: Explanations
A Cross-Border Comparison of Reproductive Behaviour among the Pinjabi and Bengali Communities of South Asia
B.M. Ramesh
Synthesizing Diverse Interpretations of Reproductive Change in India
Monica Das Gupta
Women's Autonomy and Reproductive Behaviour in India
Shireen J. Jejeebhoy
The Relative Roles of Gender and Development in Explaining Fertility in Rural Punjab
Shahnaz Kazi and Zeba A. Sathar
The Effect of Micro-Credit Programmes on the Reproductive Behaviour of Women in Rural Areas of Bangladesh
Abdullahel Hadi, Samir R. Nath, and A. M. R. Chowdhury
Son Preference in South Asia
Fred Arnold
Son Preference and the Dynamics of Fertility Decision-Making among Wives and Their Husbands in Rural Nepal
Sharon Stash
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