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Gender Equality and Women's Empowerment in India [OD57]

Ministry of Health and Family WelfareGovernment of IndiaGender Equality andWomen s Empowerment in IndiaNational Family HealthSurvey (NFHS-3)India2005-06 International Institute for Population SciencesDeonar, Mumbai 400 088 NATIONAL FAMILY HEALTH SURVEY (NFHS-3) India 2005-06 Gender Equality AND women S Empowerment IN India Sunita Kishor Kamla Gupta August 2009 Acknowledgement: We gratefully acknowledge the following persons for helping to make this report complete and possible in a very short period of time. We are particularly grateful to Hilary M. Schwandt and Noureddine Abderrahim who assisted with the data analysis; Hannah C. Guedenet who helped convert data into figures and tables; and Kiran Agrahari and Vaidehi Yelmanchili who created maps and assisted with the integration of text, tables, and figures.

codependent concepts of womens empowerment and gender equality in India and its 29 states. Also, in keeping with the third aspect of gender noted above, i.e., the ability of gender to change and adapt, trends over time in key indicators of gender equality and womens empowerment are also discussed.

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  India, Women, Empowerment, Equality, S empowerment, Equality and women s empowerment in india, Equality in india, Equality and women

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Transcription of Gender Equality and Women's Empowerment in India [OD57]

1 Ministry of Health and Family WelfareGovernment of IndiaGender Equality andWomen s Empowerment in IndiaNational Family HealthSurvey (NFHS-3)India2005-06 International Institute for Population SciencesDeonar, Mumbai 400 088 NATIONAL FAMILY HEALTH SURVEY (NFHS-3) India 2005-06 Gender Equality AND women S Empowerment IN India Sunita Kishor Kamla Gupta August 2009 Acknowledgement: We gratefully acknowledge the following persons for helping to make this report complete and possible in a very short period of time. We are particularly grateful to Hilary M. Schwandt and Noureddine Abderrahim who assisted with the data analysis; Hannah C. Guedenet who helped convert data into figures and tables; and Kiran Agrahari and Vaidehi Yelmanchili who created maps and assisted with the integration of text, tables, and figures.

2 We also wish to thank all reviewers who read drafts of the report and provided many useful comments. Suggested citation: Sunita Kishor and Kamla Gupta. 2009. Gender Equality and women s Empowerment in India . National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3), India , 2005-06. Mumbai: International Institute for Population Sciences; Calverton, Maryland, USA: ICF Macro. For additional information about the 2005-06 National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3), please contact: International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS), Govandi Station Road, Deonar, Mumbai - 400 088 Telephone: 022-2556-4883, 022-2558-3778 Fax: 022-2558-3778 E-mail: Website: For related information, visit or Page About NFHS-3.

3 1 Chapter 1 Introduction .. 3 Chapter 2 Son Preference: Sex Ratios and Related Indicators .. 7 Sex Ratios at Birth .. 9 Sex Ratios at Birth of Last Births .. 14 Sex Differentials in Mortality .. 16 Chapter 3 Gender Differences in 19 School Attendance of Children Age 6-17 Years: Levels and Differentials .. 20 Gender Differentials in Adult Literacy .. 25 Educational Attainment among Adults: Levels and Trends .. 26 Chapter 4 Marriage and Spousal Age Differentials .. 33 Age at Marriage .. 34 Spousal Age Difference .. 38 Chapter 5 Employment .. 45 women s and Men s Employment Status .. 46 women s Employment by Type of Employment .. 50 women s Occupational Distribution .. 50 Trends in Employment for Ever-Married 51 Chapter 6 Female Household Headship.

4 55 Female Household Headship: Levels and Trends .. 56 Age and Educational Profile of Female and Male Household Heads .. 56 Wealth Profile of Households by Sex of Household Head .. 57 Female Household Headship by State .. 57 Trend in the Age and Educational Profile of Female Household Heads .. 58 Chapter 7 Access to Resources .. 61 Sex Ratios by Age and Wealth Quintile .. 62 Access to Media .. 63 CONTENTS Access to Spaces Outside the Home .. 63 Access to Health Care .. 64 Access to Money that women Can Decide How To Use .. 65 Access to a Bank or Savings Account that women Themselves Use .. 66 Chapter 8 Gender Relations: Norms and Attitudes .. 71 Men s Attitudes Regarding Gender Roles in Household Decisionmaking .. 72 Acceptance of Norms about Men s Right to Beat Their Wives.

5 74 Acceptance of Norms about women s Refusal of Sex .. 78 Chapter 9 Married women and Decisionmaking .. 83 Decisions about Use of Own Earnings .. 84 Decisions about Use of Spouses Earnings .. 86 women s Earnings Relative to Their Husbands Earnings .. 87 women s Participation in Specific Household Decisions .. 89 Chapter 10 Spousal Violence .. 95 Level of Spousal Violence against Wives .. 96 Experience of Specific Acts of Violence .. 96 Spousal Violence by Marital Duration .. 98 Spousal Violence and Injuries .. 99 Spousal Violence and Indicators of women s Empowerment .. 100 Spousal Violence and Intergenerational Effects .. 102 Net Determinants of the Experience of Spousal Violence .. 103 Chapter 11 Gender , Empowerment , and Selected Health, Nutrition, and Demographic Outcomes.

6 111 Gender Differentials in Children s Full Immunization .. 112 women s Empowerment and Children s Full Immunization .. 112 Gender Differentials in Children s Likelihood of Being Underweight .. 115 Gender Differentials in the Likelihood of Adults Being Too Thin .. 116 women s Empowerment and Current Contraceptive Use .. 120 Chapter 12 Conclusions .. 125 131 ABOUT NFHS-3 The 2005-06 National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3) is the third in the NFHS series of surveys. The first NFHS was conducted in 1992-93 and the second (NFHS-2) was conducted in 1998-99. All three NFHS surveys were conducted under the stewardship of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare (MOHFW), Government of India . The MOHFW designated the International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS), Mumbai, as the nodal agency for the surveys.

7 Funding for NFHS-3 was provided by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the United Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID), the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, UNICEF, UNFPA, and the Government of India . Technical assistance for NFHS-3 was provided by ICF Macro, Calverton, Maryland, USA. Assistance for the HIV component of the survey was provided by the National AIDS Control Organization (NACO) and the National AIDS Research Institute (NARI), Pune. The survey provides trend data on key indicators of family welfare, maternal and child health, and nutrition, and includes information on several new topics such as use of the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) programme, HIV prevalence, attitudes toward family life education for girls and boys, men s involvement in maternal care, high-risk sexual behaviour, and health insurance coverage.

8 NFHS-3 collected information from a nationally representative sample of 124,385 women age 15-49 and 74,369 men age 15-54 in 109,041 households. This report presents key findings on Gender Equality and women s Empowerment in India . More information about the definitions of indicators included in this report is contained in Volume I of the NFHS-3 National Report, and the questionnaires and details of the sampling procedure for NFHS-3 are contained in Volume II of the NFHS-3 National Report (available at ). 1. INTRODUCTION Summary and Key Findings Gender Equality and women s Empowerment are two sides of the same coin. Both have multiple dimensions that together yield a wide variety of indicators. The report provides information on o progress in India toward the twin goals of Gender Equality and women s Empowerment ; o determinants of selected indicators of Gender Equality and women s Empowerment ; and, o associations of women s Empowerment with selected health and nutritional outcomes.

9 4 Over the past decade, Gender Equality and women s Empowerment have been explicitly recognized as key not only to the health of nations, but also to social and economic development. India s National Population Policy 2000 has empowering women for health and nutrition as one of its crosscutting strategic themes. Additionally, the promotion of Gender Equality and empowering of women is one of the eight Millennium Development Goals (MDG) to which India is a signatory. The pairing of the two concepts of women s Empowerment and Gender Equality into one MDG implicitly recognizes that Gender Equality and women s Empowerment are two sides of the same coin: progress toward Gender Equality requires women s Empowerment and women s Empowerment requires increases in Gender Equality as shown.

10 Since Gender inequality and women s disempowerment occur in all the different domains in which women and men interact and function, both concepts are multi-dimensional; consequently, they give rise to a large number of potential indicators. Indicators of Gender Equality /inequality are typically designed to compare the status of women and men on particular characteristics of interest; whereas, by definition, indicators of Empowerment / disempowerment tend not to be relative. Instead, indicators of Empowerment are designed to measure roles, attitudes, and rights of women and sometimes men. In order to measure Gender Equality and women s Empowerment , the concepts need to be clearly defined and their hypothesized associations with each other and health outcomes discussed.


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