Status of women in two Bengals: evidence from large scale surveys

Journal of Biosocial Science
Aparajita Chattopadhyay, Baishali Goswami

Abstract

Greater female autonomy is mirrored through better performance in the major demographic and social indicators. This study attempts to capture the effect of religion on the status of women considering 'Greater Bengal'. There is much evidence suggesting that when cultural factors are constant, religion does not have a significant effect on any demographic issue. In this paper, the validity of this proposition is examined using two datasets, namely NFHS II (98-99) and BDHS 2000. It is clear from the analyses that not only region but also religion has a distinct effect on the status of women. In West Bengal, the religious gap for all the indicators considered is pretty high, whereas in Bangladesh the gap is not that wide. A state-level population policy is needed in West Bengal to act as a social leveller.

Citations

Oct 19, 2011·Journal of Biosocial Science·Aparajita Chattopadhyay
Mar 15, 2016·Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion·Victor Agadjanian, Scott T Yabiku
Mar 30, 2013·Annual Review of Economics·James Banks, James P Smith
Mar 29, 2019·Annual Review of Sociology·Kathleen Mullan Harris, Kristen M Schorpp
Feb 23, 2010·Biodemography and Social Biology·Narayan SastryRobert F Schoeni

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