Marital stability in sub-Saharan Africa: Do women’s autonomy and socioeconomic situation matter?

Type Journal Article - Journal of family and economic issues
Title Marital stability in sub-Saharan Africa: Do women’s autonomy and socioeconomic situation matter?
Author(s)
Volume 27
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2006
Page numbers 113-132
URL http://www.springerlink.com/index/E876573N58H24710.pdf
Abstract
One key hypothesis that has received considerable attention in recent family discourse is the notion that improvements in women’s socioeconomic circumstances (also called female autonomy) has a positive effect on familial processes and outcomes such as marital instability. Absent from this debate are cross-cultural research that test the applicability of these findings with non-U.S. data. We use representative data from Ghana to explore whether dimensions of women’s autonomy have the hypothesized positive effect on divorce processes in Africa. Consistent with findings from the United States, results from our African data demonstrate that women’s autonomy has a positive effect on divorce. This observation is true not only with the use of conventional autonomy measures such as work and education, but also with regard to institutional measures of autonomy such as matrilineal kinship ties.

Related studies

»
»