Type | Report |
Title | The impact of male labor migration on contraception and abortion dynamics among women married to migrants in rural Armenia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://www.ysu.am/files/Gegharkunik study_Ani Jilozian.pdf |
Abstract | There exists a well-developed pattern of seasonal migration in Armenia, primarily to Russia as well as other parts of the former Soviet Union (NSS RA, 2010). Armenian males typically leave the country in the early spring to work in construction and agriculture and return in late autumn (ILO, 2009). The duration of their annual work abroad is often 5-11 months, with a mean duration of 9 months (ILO, 2009). According to the 2010 Armenia Demographic and Health Survey (ADHS), 22% of currently married women and 28% of formerly married women reported that their spouses had worked abroad during the 3 years preceding the survey for at least 3 months at a time (NSS RA 2012). In general, urban women, those with higher education, and those from the wealthiest households were less likely to report that a husband was employed away from home compared with rural, less educated, and less wealthy women (NSS RA 2012). In the Gegharkunik province, one of the poorest provinces in Armenia where the data in this study were collected, men work as seasonal labor migrants in high numbers due to poor conditions unfavorable for agriculture and a shortage of nonagricultural employment (Asatryan, 2007). Regional variations are great. Nearly half of ever-married women in Gegharkunik (44%) report that their husbands work 4 abroad compared with 1% of ever-married women in the Syunik province (NSS RA 2012). |
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