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Journal ArticleDOI

Women's Schooling and Child Care in the Demographic Transition: A Mexican Case Study

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TLDR
The question of how female school attendance influences fertility and child survival in developing countries has emerged as an important problem in the analysis of demographic change and the evaluation of health and population policies as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
THE QUESTION OF HOW FEMALE SCHOOL ATTENDANCE influences fertility and child survival in developing countries has emerged as an important problem in the analysis of demographic change and the evaluation of health and population policies. An extensive research literature based on national surveys and censuses conducted in developing countries shows maternal schooling to be a highly consistent household-level predictor of reduced fertility and child mortality, even when other socioeconomic factors are controlled.' This has led to proposals for expanding female school enrollment as a means of facilitating future reductions in fertility and child mortality rates in those countries where they remain high-despite scant information on the processes through which these reductions would occur.2 Gender equality in access to schooling can be justified without reference to the consequences for health and population growth, let alone scientific analysis of the processes involved. But consideration of expanded opportunities for schooling as an instrument of health and population policy calls for a deeper understanding of how the formal education of women affects their reproductive and health behavior.3 The research reported in this article was designed to contribute to that understanding through community-level studies in Mexico. The robust and widespread associations found between women's schooling and demographic variables are at once extremely familiar and

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Measuring living standards with proxy variables

TL;DR: It is found that the proxies employed in much demographic research are very weak predictors of consumption per adult, Nevertheless, hypothesis tests based on proxies are likely to be powerful enough to warrant consideration.
Journal ArticleDOI

Linking Social Change and Developmental Change: Shifting Pathways of Human Development.

TL;DR: Sciiocultural environments are not static either in the developed or the developing world and therefore must be treated dynamically in developmental research.
Book

Care and Nutrition: Concepts and Measurement

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors extended the UNICEF model of care and summarized the literature on the relationship of care practices and resources to child nutrition, and defined resources needed by the caregiver for care and showed that the child's own characteristics play a role in the kind of care that he or she receives.
Journal Article

Women's Education, Child Welfare and Child Survival: A Review of the Evidence

TL;DR: Important regional patterns are uncovered, and particular attention is paid to discussion of the weaker associations observed in sub-Saharan Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cultural and Educational Variations in Maternal Responsiveness

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined cultural and educational variations in maternal responsiveness and found that maternal responsiveness is affected by cross-cultural differences in conventions of conversational interaction and mothers' levels of formal education.
References
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Book

Apprenticeship in Thinking: Cognitive Development in Social Context

TL;DR: In this article, the individual and the sociocultural context of cognitive activity are discussed, and the process of guided participation is discussed, including providing bridges from known to new Structuring situations and transferring responsibility Cultural universals and variations in guided participation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A framework for analyzing the proximate determinants of fertility

TL;DR: In this article, a more detailed analysis may show that among educated women marriage is relatively late or the use of contraception more frequent, thus clarifying the relationship between education and fertility.
Journal ArticleDOI

Education as a factor in mortality decline: an examination of Nigerian data

TL;DR: It is concluded that womens education in societies like that of the Yoruba in Nigeria can produce profound changes in family structure and relationships which in turn may influence both mortality and fertility levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Routes to low mortality in poor countries.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined how certain populations have achieved low mortality and whether these methods might be utilized by other poor populations and examined relative to income levels for Third World countries classified as either superior health achievers or poor health achiever; other variables examined are population density family planning use religion and educational level.
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