How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan
Forced displacement has disrupted Syrian refugees’ lives and exposed them to new communities and norms. This paper assesses how gender norms shape the lives of Syrian refugee adolescent girls in Jordan, using nationally representative data. Factor analysis is used to summarize a variety of beliefs and behavioral aspects of norms: gender role attitudes, justification of domestic violence, decision making, and mobility. The paper compares these outcomes by sex, nationality, and for adolescents versus adults. It complements the data on individual beliefs and behaviors with family and community beliefs and behaviors as proxies for others’ expectations and behaviors. The paper then examines how own, family, and community gender norms relate to two key adolescent outcomes: domestic work and enrollment in school. The findings show that while gender role attitudes are similar across generations and nationalities, Syrian adolescent girls are particularly restricted in their mobility. Nonetheless, they have similar educational outcomes as boys and, after accounting for differences in socioeconomic status, as Jordanian girls. While gender inequality in domestic work is substantial, higher levels of own and mother’s decision making predict lower domestic workloads, illustrating the linkages between different dimensions of gender norms and social and economic outcomes.
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2021-10
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Subjects: | GENDER NORMS, REFUGEE, EDUCATION, CARE WORK, ADOLESCENT GIRLS, FORCED DISPLACEMENT, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/914761635472358174/How-Do-Gender-Norms-Shape-Education-and-Domestic-Work-Outcomes-The-Case-of-Syrian-Refugee-Adolescents-in-Jordan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36471 |
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dig-okr-10986364712021-11-05T05:10:38Z How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan Krafft, Caroline Ragui, Assaad Pastoor, Isabel GENDER NORMS REFUGEE EDUCATION CARE WORK ADOLESCENT GIRLS FORCED DISPLACEMENT Forced displacement has disrupted Syrian refugees’ lives and exposed them to new communities and norms. This paper assesses how gender norms shape the lives of Syrian refugee adolescent girls in Jordan, using nationally representative data. Factor analysis is used to summarize a variety of beliefs and behavioral aspects of norms: gender role attitudes, justification of domestic violence, decision making, and mobility. The paper compares these outcomes by sex, nationality, and for adolescents versus adults. It complements the data on individual beliefs and behaviors with family and community beliefs and behaviors as proxies for others’ expectations and behaviors. The paper then examines how own, family, and community gender norms relate to two key adolescent outcomes: domestic work and enrollment in school. The findings show that while gender role attitudes are similar across generations and nationalities, Syrian adolescent girls are particularly restricted in their mobility. Nonetheless, they have similar educational outcomes as boys and, after accounting for differences in socioeconomic status, as Jordanian girls. While gender inequality in domestic work is substantial, higher levels of own and mother’s decision making predict lower domestic workloads, illustrating the linkages between different dimensions of gender norms and social and economic outcomes. 2021-11-04T14:13:24Z 2021-11-04T14:13:24Z 2021-10 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/914761635472358174/How-Do-Gender-Norms-Shape-Education-and-Domestic-Work-Outcomes-The-Case-of-Syrian-Refugee-Adolescents-in-Jordan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36471 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9820 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Middle East and North Africa Jordan Syrian Arab Republic |
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GENDER NORMS REFUGEE EDUCATION CARE WORK ADOLESCENT GIRLS FORCED DISPLACEMENT GENDER NORMS REFUGEE EDUCATION CARE WORK ADOLESCENT GIRLS FORCED DISPLACEMENT |
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GENDER NORMS REFUGEE EDUCATION CARE WORK ADOLESCENT GIRLS FORCED DISPLACEMENT GENDER NORMS REFUGEE EDUCATION CARE WORK ADOLESCENT GIRLS FORCED DISPLACEMENT Krafft, Caroline Ragui, Assaad Pastoor, Isabel How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan |
description |
Forced displacement has disrupted
Syrian refugees’ lives and exposed them to new communities
and norms. This paper assesses how gender norms shape the
lives of Syrian refugee adolescent girls in Jordan, using
nationally representative data. Factor analysis is used to
summarize a variety of beliefs and behavioral aspects of
norms: gender role attitudes, justification of domestic
violence, decision making, and mobility. The paper compares
these outcomes by sex, nationality, and for adolescents
versus adults. It complements the data on individual beliefs
and behaviors with family and community beliefs and
behaviors as proxies for others’ expectations and behaviors.
The paper then examines how own, family, and community
gender norms relate to two key adolescent outcomes: domestic
work and enrollment in school. The findings show that while
gender role attitudes are similar across generations and
nationalities, Syrian adolescent girls are particularly
restricted in their mobility. Nonetheless, they have similar
educational outcomes as boys and, after accounting for
differences in socioeconomic status, as Jordanian girls.
While gender inequality in domestic work is substantial,
higher levels of own and mother’s decision making predict
lower domestic workloads, illustrating the linkages between
different dimensions of gender norms and social and economic outcomes. |
format |
Working Paper |
topic_facet |
GENDER NORMS REFUGEE EDUCATION CARE WORK ADOLESCENT GIRLS FORCED DISPLACEMENT |
author |
Krafft, Caroline Ragui, Assaad Pastoor, Isabel |
author_facet |
Krafft, Caroline Ragui, Assaad Pastoor, Isabel |
author_sort |
Krafft, Caroline |
title |
How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan |
title_short |
How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan |
title_full |
How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan |
title_fullStr |
How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan |
title_full_unstemmed |
How Do Gender Norms Shape Education and Domestic Work Outcomes? The Case of Syrian Refugee Adolescents in Jordan |
title_sort |
how do gender norms shape education and domestic work outcomes? the case of syrian refugee adolescents in jordan |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2021-10 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/914761635472358174/How-Do-Gender-Norms-Shape-Education-and-Domestic-Work-Outcomes-The-Case-of-Syrian-Refugee-Adolescents-in-Jordan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36471 |
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