Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea

Son preference has persisted in the face of sweeping economic and social changes in China, India, and the Republic of Korea. The authors attribute this to their similar family systems, which generate strong disincentives to raise daughters while valuing adult women's contributions to the household. Urbanization, female education, and employment can only slowly change these incentives without more direct efforts by the state and civil society to increase the flexibility of the kinship system such that daughters and sons can be perceived as being more equally valuable. Much can be done to this end through social movements, legislation, and the mass media.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Das Gupta, Monica, Zhenghua, Jiang, Bohua, Li, Zhenming, Xie, Chung, Woojin, Hwa-Ok, Bae
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2002-12
Subjects:ABORTION, ABORTIONS, AGED, AUTONOMY, BACK, BIRTHS, CATTLE, CHILD MORTALITY, CHILDBEARING, CITIES, CLAN, CONTRACEPTION, DISCRIMINATION, DOWRIES, DOWRY, DUCKS, EARLY CHILDHOOD, EMPLOYMENT, EXOGAMY, FACE, FAMILIES, FAMILY PLANNING, FEMALE, FEMALES, FERTILITY, GENDER, GENDER DISCRIMINATION, GENERATIONS, GIRLS, HANDS, HEALTH CARE, HOUSEHOLDS, HOUSING, IDENTITY, ILLITERACY, INDUSTRIALIZATION, INFANTICIDE, KINSHIP, LAWS, LIFE EXPECTANCY, LIVING CONDITIONS, MARITAL STATUS, MARRIAGES, MARRIED WOMEN, MASS MEDIA, MORTALITY, MORTALITY RATE, MOTHERS, MOTIVATION, OLD AGE, OLDER WOMEN, PARENTS, PATRIARCHY, POWER, PREGNANCY, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC SERVICES, REPRODUCTION, RITUALS, RURAL AREAS, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, SEX, SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, SOCIAL MOVEMENTS, SOCIETIES, SOCIETY, VILLAGES, YOUNG MOTHER,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/12/2122050/son-preference-so-persistent-east-south-asia-cross-country-study-china-india-republic-korea
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19191
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098619191
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986191912024-08-08T17:48:57Z Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea Das Gupta, Monica Zhenghua, Jiang Bohua, Li Zhenming, Xie Chung, Woojin Hwa-Ok, Bae ABORTION ABORTIONS AGED AUTONOMY BACK BIRTHS CATTLE CHILD MORTALITY CHILDBEARING CITIES CLAN CONTRACEPTION DISCRIMINATION DOWRIES DOWRY DUCKS EARLY CHILDHOOD EMPLOYMENT EXOGAMY FACE FAMILIES FAMILY PLANNING FEMALE FEMALES FERTILITY GENDER GENDER DISCRIMINATION GENERATIONS GIRLS HANDS HEALTH CARE HOUSEHOLDS HOUSING IDENTITY ILLITERACY INDUSTRIALIZATION INFANTICIDE KINSHIP LAWS LIFE EXPECTANCY LIVING CONDITIONS MARITAL STATUS MARRIAGES MARRIED WOMEN MASS MEDIA MORTALITY MORTALITY RATE MOTHERS MOTIVATION OLD AGE OLDER WOMEN PARENTS PATRIARCHY POWER PREGNANCY PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC SERVICES REPRODUCTION RITUALS RURAL AREAS RURAL DEVELOPMENT SEX SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT SOCIAL MOVEMENTS SOCIETIES SOCIETY VILLAGES YOUNG MOTHER Son preference has persisted in the face of sweeping economic and social changes in China, India, and the Republic of Korea. The authors attribute this to their similar family systems, which generate strong disincentives to raise daughters while valuing adult women's contributions to the household. Urbanization, female education, and employment can only slowly change these incentives without more direct efforts by the state and civil society to increase the flexibility of the kinship system such that daughters and sons can be perceived as being more equally valuable. Much can be done to this end through social movements, legislation, and the mass media. 2014-08-01T17:11:58Z 2014-08-01T17:11:58Z 2002-12 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/12/2122050/son-preference-so-persistent-east-south-asia-cross-country-study-china-india-republic-korea https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19191 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2942 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic ABORTION
ABORTIONS
AGED
AUTONOMY
BACK
BIRTHS
CATTLE
CHILD MORTALITY
CHILDBEARING
CITIES
CLAN
CONTRACEPTION
DISCRIMINATION
DOWRIES
DOWRY
DUCKS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EMPLOYMENT
EXOGAMY
FACE
FAMILIES
FAMILY PLANNING
FEMALE
FEMALES
FERTILITY
GENDER
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
GENERATIONS
GIRLS
HANDS
HEALTH CARE
HOUSEHOLDS
HOUSING
IDENTITY
ILLITERACY
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFANTICIDE
KINSHIP
LAWS
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIVING CONDITIONS
MARITAL STATUS
MARRIAGES
MARRIED WOMEN
MASS MEDIA
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
MOTHERS
MOTIVATION
OLD AGE
OLDER WOMEN
PARENTS
PATRIARCHY
POWER
PREGNANCY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REPRODUCTION
RITUALS
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SEX
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
SOCIETIES
SOCIETY
VILLAGES
YOUNG MOTHER
ABORTION
ABORTIONS
AGED
AUTONOMY
BACK
BIRTHS
CATTLE
CHILD MORTALITY
CHILDBEARING
CITIES
CLAN
CONTRACEPTION
DISCRIMINATION
DOWRIES
DOWRY
DUCKS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EMPLOYMENT
EXOGAMY
FACE
FAMILIES
FAMILY PLANNING
FEMALE
FEMALES
FERTILITY
GENDER
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
GENERATIONS
GIRLS
HANDS
HEALTH CARE
HOUSEHOLDS
HOUSING
IDENTITY
ILLITERACY
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFANTICIDE
KINSHIP
LAWS
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIVING CONDITIONS
MARITAL STATUS
MARRIAGES
MARRIED WOMEN
MASS MEDIA
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
MOTHERS
MOTIVATION
OLD AGE
OLDER WOMEN
PARENTS
PATRIARCHY
POWER
PREGNANCY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REPRODUCTION
RITUALS
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SEX
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
SOCIETIES
SOCIETY
VILLAGES
YOUNG MOTHER
spellingShingle ABORTION
ABORTIONS
AGED
AUTONOMY
BACK
BIRTHS
CATTLE
CHILD MORTALITY
CHILDBEARING
CITIES
CLAN
CONTRACEPTION
DISCRIMINATION
DOWRIES
DOWRY
DUCKS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EMPLOYMENT
EXOGAMY
FACE
FAMILIES
FAMILY PLANNING
FEMALE
FEMALES
FERTILITY
GENDER
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
GENERATIONS
GIRLS
HANDS
HEALTH CARE
HOUSEHOLDS
HOUSING
IDENTITY
ILLITERACY
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFANTICIDE
KINSHIP
LAWS
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIVING CONDITIONS
MARITAL STATUS
MARRIAGES
MARRIED WOMEN
MASS MEDIA
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
MOTHERS
MOTIVATION
OLD AGE
OLDER WOMEN
PARENTS
PATRIARCHY
POWER
PREGNANCY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REPRODUCTION
RITUALS
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SEX
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
SOCIETIES
SOCIETY
VILLAGES
YOUNG MOTHER
ABORTION
ABORTIONS
AGED
AUTONOMY
BACK
BIRTHS
CATTLE
CHILD MORTALITY
CHILDBEARING
CITIES
CLAN
CONTRACEPTION
DISCRIMINATION
DOWRIES
DOWRY
DUCKS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EMPLOYMENT
EXOGAMY
FACE
FAMILIES
FAMILY PLANNING
FEMALE
FEMALES
FERTILITY
GENDER
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
GENERATIONS
GIRLS
HANDS
HEALTH CARE
HOUSEHOLDS
HOUSING
IDENTITY
ILLITERACY
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFANTICIDE
KINSHIP
LAWS
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIVING CONDITIONS
MARITAL STATUS
MARRIAGES
MARRIED WOMEN
MASS MEDIA
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
MOTHERS
MOTIVATION
OLD AGE
OLDER WOMEN
PARENTS
PATRIARCHY
POWER
PREGNANCY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REPRODUCTION
RITUALS
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SEX
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
SOCIETIES
SOCIETY
VILLAGES
YOUNG MOTHER
Das Gupta, Monica
Zhenghua, Jiang
Bohua, Li
Zhenming, Xie
Chung, Woojin
Hwa-Ok, Bae
Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea
description Son preference has persisted in the face of sweeping economic and social changes in China, India, and the Republic of Korea. The authors attribute this to their similar family systems, which generate strong disincentives to raise daughters while valuing adult women's contributions to the household. Urbanization, female education, and employment can only slowly change these incentives without more direct efforts by the state and civil society to increase the flexibility of the kinship system such that daughters and sons can be perceived as being more equally valuable. Much can be done to this end through social movements, legislation, and the mass media.
topic_facet ABORTION
ABORTIONS
AGED
AUTONOMY
BACK
BIRTHS
CATTLE
CHILD MORTALITY
CHILDBEARING
CITIES
CLAN
CONTRACEPTION
DISCRIMINATION
DOWRIES
DOWRY
DUCKS
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EMPLOYMENT
EXOGAMY
FACE
FAMILIES
FAMILY PLANNING
FEMALE
FEMALES
FERTILITY
GENDER
GENDER DISCRIMINATION
GENERATIONS
GIRLS
HANDS
HEALTH CARE
HOUSEHOLDS
HOUSING
IDENTITY
ILLITERACY
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INFANTICIDE
KINSHIP
LAWS
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LIVING CONDITIONS
MARITAL STATUS
MARRIAGES
MARRIED WOMEN
MASS MEDIA
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
MOTHERS
MOTIVATION
OLD AGE
OLDER WOMEN
PARENTS
PATRIARCHY
POWER
PREGNANCY
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC SERVICES
REPRODUCTION
RITUALS
RURAL AREAS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
SEX
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS
SOCIETIES
SOCIETY
VILLAGES
YOUNG MOTHER
author Das Gupta, Monica
Zhenghua, Jiang
Bohua, Li
Zhenming, Xie
Chung, Woojin
Hwa-Ok, Bae
author_facet Das Gupta, Monica
Zhenghua, Jiang
Bohua, Li
Zhenming, Xie
Chung, Woojin
Hwa-Ok, Bae
author_sort Das Gupta, Monica
title Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea
title_short Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea
title_full Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea
title_fullStr Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea
title_full_unstemmed Why is Son Preference so Persistent in East and South Asia? A Cross-Country Study of China, India, and the Republic of Korea
title_sort why is son preference so persistent in east and south asia? a cross-country study of china, india, and the republic of korea
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2002-12
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/12/2122050/son-preference-so-persistent-east-south-asia-cross-country-study-china-india-republic-korea
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19191
work_keys_str_mv AT dasguptamonica whyissonpreferencesopersistentineastandsouthasiaacrosscountrystudyofchinaindiaandtherepublicofkorea
AT zhenghuajiang whyissonpreferencesopersistentineastandsouthasiaacrosscountrystudyofchinaindiaandtherepublicofkorea
AT bohuali whyissonpreferencesopersistentineastandsouthasiaacrosscountrystudyofchinaindiaandtherepublicofkorea
AT zhenmingxie whyissonpreferencesopersistentineastandsouthasiaacrosscountrystudyofchinaindiaandtherepublicofkorea
AT chungwoojin whyissonpreferencesopersistentineastandsouthasiaacrosscountrystudyofchinaindiaandtherepublicofkorea
AT hwaokbae whyissonpreferencesopersistentineastandsouthasiaacrosscountrystudyofchinaindiaandtherepublicofkorea
_version_ 1807156132427333632