Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico

The authors of this paper examine Amartya Sen's contributions to the concept of human well-being from a gender perspective and argue that this concept is particularly useful for explaining women's decisions on contraceptive use. The study draws on data collected in six rural communities of Chiapas, Mexico. It emphasizes the ways in which public discourse articulates the apparent benefits of having small families; the context of the household and community in which rural women make reproductive decisions; and the impact of family planning programs on women's sense of subjective well-being. In particular, it questions the assumption that reduced fertility through contraception necessarily enhances women's well-being and points to the importance that women attach to being a party to reproductive decisions. The authors also explore the links between women's assessment of these decisions and of paid work, and their actual education levels and real possibilities of employment.

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Main Authors: Nazar Beutelspacher, Austreberta Doctora 1960- autora 2010, Zapata Martelo, Emma Doctora autora 8259, Vázquez García, Verónica autora 14048
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Anticonceptivos, Programas de planificación familiar, Mujeres rurales, Salud sexual y reproductiva, Educación de la mujer,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1080/1354570022000077971
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:51697
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:516972024-03-12T12:27:30ZDoes contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico Nazar Beutelspacher, Austreberta Doctora 1960- autora 2010 Zapata Martelo, Emma Doctora autora 8259 Vázquez García, Verónica autora 14048 textengThe authors of this paper examine Amartya Sen's contributions to the concept of human well-being from a gender perspective and argue that this concept is particularly useful for explaining women's decisions on contraceptive use. The study draws on data collected in six rural communities of Chiapas, Mexico. It emphasizes the ways in which public discourse articulates the apparent benefits of having small families; the context of the household and community in which rural women make reproductive decisions; and the impact of family planning programs on women's sense of subjective well-being. In particular, it questions the assumption that reduced fertility through contraception necessarily enhances women's well-being and points to the importance that women attach to being a party to reproductive decisions. The authors also explore the links between women's assessment of these decisions and of paid work, and their actual education levels and real possibilities of employment.The authors of this paper examine Amartya Sen's contributions to the concept of human well-being from a gender perspective and argue that this concept is particularly useful for explaining women's decisions on contraceptive use. The study draws on data collected in six rural communities of Chiapas, Mexico. It emphasizes the ways in which public discourse articulates the apparent benefits of having small families; the context of the household and community in which rural women make reproductive decisions; and the impact of family planning programs on women's sense of subjective well-being. In particular, it questions the assumption that reduced fertility through contraception necessarily enhances women's well-being and points to the importance that women attach to being a party to reproductive decisions. The authors also explore the links between women's assessment of these decisions and of paid work, and their actual education levels and real possibilities of employment.AnticonceptivosProgramas de planificación familiarMujeres ruralesSalud sexual y reproductivaEducación de la mujerJournal Feminist Economicshttps://doi.org/10.1080/1354570022000077971Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Anticonceptivos
Programas de planificación familiar
Mujeres rurales
Salud sexual y reproductiva
Educación de la mujer
Anticonceptivos
Programas de planificación familiar
Mujeres rurales
Salud sexual y reproductiva
Educación de la mujer
spellingShingle Anticonceptivos
Programas de planificación familiar
Mujeres rurales
Salud sexual y reproductiva
Educación de la mujer
Anticonceptivos
Programas de planificación familiar
Mujeres rurales
Salud sexual y reproductiva
Educación de la mujer
Nazar Beutelspacher, Austreberta Doctora 1960- autora 2010
Zapata Martelo, Emma Doctora autora 8259
Vázquez García, Verónica autora 14048
Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico
description The authors of this paper examine Amartya Sen's contributions to the concept of human well-being from a gender perspective and argue that this concept is particularly useful for explaining women's decisions on contraceptive use. The study draws on data collected in six rural communities of Chiapas, Mexico. It emphasizes the ways in which public discourse articulates the apparent benefits of having small families; the context of the household and community in which rural women make reproductive decisions; and the impact of family planning programs on women's sense of subjective well-being. In particular, it questions the assumption that reduced fertility through contraception necessarily enhances women's well-being and points to the importance that women attach to being a party to reproductive decisions. The authors also explore the links between women's assessment of these decisions and of paid work, and their actual education levels and real possibilities of employment.
format Texto
topic_facet Anticonceptivos
Programas de planificación familiar
Mujeres rurales
Salud sexual y reproductiva
Educación de la mujer
author Nazar Beutelspacher, Austreberta Doctora 1960- autora 2010
Zapata Martelo, Emma Doctora autora 8259
Vázquez García, Verónica autora 14048
author_facet Nazar Beutelspacher, Austreberta Doctora 1960- autora 2010
Zapata Martelo, Emma Doctora autora 8259
Vázquez García, Verónica autora 14048
author_sort Nazar Beutelspacher, Austreberta Doctora 1960- autora 2010
title Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico
title_short Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico
title_full Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico
title_fullStr Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico
title_sort does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural mexico
url https://doi.org/10.1080/1354570022000077971
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