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1.
Stud Fam Plann ; 31(2): 124-37, 2000 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10907278

ABSTRACT

This study uses survey and focus-group data from the 1995-96 Negotiating Reproductive Outcomes study in Uganda to describe the nature of the decision to stop childbearing and to question the simplifying assumption of consensus decision-making implicit in much demographic research on unmet need. Negotiation is characterized in four stages, from normative precedent for decision-making to communication, disagreement, and conflict resolution. Indirect forms of communication between partners predominate, contributing to the tendency of both men and women to overestimate each other's demand for additional children. Partner opposition is found to cause a statistically significant increase in unmet need reported by women and a shift in contraceptive mix favoring use of traditional methods over modern methods. For women, partner opposition may account for as much as 20 percent of unmet need in urban areas, 12 percent in rural areas, and 15 percent overall.


Subject(s)
Contraception Behavior , Family Planning Services , Health Services Needs and Demand , Negotiating , Adult , Decision Making , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires , Uganda
2.
Fertil Determ Res Notes ; (23): 9-10, 1988 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12283513

ABSTRACT

PIP: In the high fertility area of Bankole, a 1985 study of the value of children to the Banyankole was conducted. Information on marriage patterns, perceptions of the pros and cons of children, and the costs and benefits of extended families was obtained through a random sampling of 900 household and surveys of more than 1000 ever-married man and 1000 ever-married women. A total fertility rate of 8.7 exists for the area, with rate differences observed between socioeconomic groups. Of pastoralists, peasants, and cultivators, the pastoralists reported the lowest fertility rate of 7.1, compared to the highest rate from the cultivators of 10.3. Despite the effect of education, employment, and religion in increasing the age of first marriage from 18 years in 1969 to 21.5 by 1985, cultural practices persist in encouraging high fertility levels. Pastoralist male migration for work during dry season, and the female return to her parents' home following delivery may be 2 practices contributing to a comparative lower fertility rate among this group. Absence of taboos regarding postpartum sexual abstinence among the Banyankole is a determinant of high fertility for the Ankole as a whole. With recorded 4% annual growth in the area, and governmental budgetary constraints to shifting funds into the social service sector, politically, culturally, and socially acceptable population policies are needed to combat pronatalist customs of the Ankole.^ieng


Subject(s)
Agriculture , Child , Culture , Data Collection , Family , Fertility , Population Dynamics , Rural Population , Africa , Africa South of the Sahara , Africa, Eastern , Demography , Developing Countries , Economics , Family Characteristics , Population , Population Characteristics , Research , Sampling Studies , Uganda
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