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Son Preference, Fertility and Family Structure : Evidence from Reproductive Behavior among Nigerian Women

2014

Milazzo, Annamaria


Bibliographic information
Publisher
World Bank, Washington, DC
Other Subjects
Domestic chores; Gender bias; Wife; Maternal health; Control over resources; Risk of death; Demographers; Household level; Policy research; Residence; Child birth; Lower fertility; Number of children; Family structures; Child mortality; Opposite sex; Maternal health outcomes; Female education; Biological child; Effects of gender; Maternal death; Progress; Child death; Extended family; Infant mortality rates; Rhythm method; Custody; Number of births; Wives; Male condom; Maternal care; Maternal deaths; Infant mortality; Health status of mothers; Childlessness; No more children; Girl children; Orphans; Family health; Marriage age; Sex-selective abortion; Gender differences; Gender disparities; Women's health; Husbands; Male relatives; Policy implications; First birth; Childbirth; Lifetime risk; Uneducated women; Reproductive years; Either sex; Social pressure; Infanticide; Young ages; Inheritance; Fertility preferences; Development policy; Parental involvement; Son preference; Complications; Fetal growth; Health care services; Disparities in health; Child labor; First pregnancy; Female mortality; Sex of the fetus; Will; Human development; First marriage; Deceased husband; Fewer children; Traditional practice; Policy discussions; Inheritance rights; Fertility rate; Reproductive behavior; Household size; Woman; Younger women; Respect; Immigrants; Mother; Older women; Sex ratios; Contraceptive method; Female children; Pregnancies; Maternal mortality; Pills; Widows; First births; Policy research working paper; Husband; Descent; Live births; Religious practices; Marriages; Birth spacing; Use of contraception; Married men; Number of deaths; Spouses; Use of contraceptives; Kinship; Preference for sons; Gender preferences; Method of contraception; Fertility behavior; Female; Family members; Allocation of resources; Biological fathers; Family ties; Father; Excess mortality; Dying; Adult mortality; Biological children; Health facilities; Married women; Number of girls; Health status; Household composition; Contraceptive use; First child; Polygyny; Socioeconomic status; Family income; Ownership of land; Reproductive goal; Interval between births
License
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6869http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/CC BY 3.0 IGO
Source
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6869

2014-09-15
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