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Unwanted daughters : Gender Discrimination in Modern India

Sekher, T. V. and Hatti, Neelambar LU (2010)
Abstract
During the past two decades, considerable debate has taken place, particularly in India, on the imbalance in gender ratio and the question of 'missing women.' However, the recent discourses in India have changed the focus from 'missing women' to 'missing girls,' highlighting the precarious situation of female children before birth, at birth, and during childhood. Fetuses have been aborted on a massive scale in recent decades simply because of gender. This raises many questions: Why are female children still at risk despite the progress in female literacy and the growing participation of women in economic and political activities? Is there a significant shift from perceived 'son preference' to deliberate 'daughter discrimination' at the... (More)
During the past two decades, considerable debate has taken place, particularly in India, on the imbalance in gender ratio and the question of 'missing women.' However, the recent discourses in India have changed the focus from 'missing women' to 'missing girls,' highlighting the precarious situation of female children before birth, at birth, and during childhood. Fetuses have been aborted on a massive scale in recent decades simply because of gender. This raises many questions: Why are female children still at risk despite the progress in female literacy and the growing participation of women in economic and political activities? Is there a significant shift from perceived 'son preference' to deliberate 'daughter discrimination' at the household level? Are the advances in reproductive technologies helping couples to achieve the preferred family size and the desired gender of children? Is there a growing realization that daughters are rarely able to 'substitute' for sons, resulting in an intensification of gender bias even among the better-off sections of the Indian society? In order to answer these questions, it is necessary to understand the nexus of economic, social, and cultural factors that underlie daughter discrimination. Based on extensive research, the essays in this book - by sociologists, demographers, economists, and gender specialists - provide a multidisciplinary perspective to the varied facets of increasing gender bias in contemporary India. The contributing scholars emphasize the need for a change in the attitudes of society towards girls as a lasting solution to this social epidemic. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
editor
Sekher, T. V. and LU
organization
publishing date
type
Book/Report
publication status
published
subject
keywords
daughter discrimination, sex selection, son preference, India, sex discrimination, sex distribution
pages
276 pages
publisher
Rawat Publications
ISBN
81-3160323-7
9-788131-603239
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fd7ad81c-a3e0-423b-b844-b0005f377242 (old id 1385760)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 11:38:57
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:06:14
@book{fd7ad81c-a3e0-423b-b844-b0005f377242,
  abstract     = {{During the past two decades, considerable debate has taken place, particularly in India, on the imbalance in gender ratio and the question of 'missing women.' However, the recent discourses in India have changed the focus from 'missing women' to 'missing girls,' highlighting the precarious situation of female children before birth, at birth, and during childhood. Fetuses have been aborted on a massive scale in recent decades simply because of gender. This raises many questions: Why are female children still at risk despite the progress in female literacy and the growing participation of women in economic and political activities? Is there a significant shift from perceived 'son preference' to deliberate 'daughter discrimination' at the household level? Are the advances in reproductive technologies helping couples to achieve the preferred family size and the desired gender of children? Is there a growing realization that daughters are rarely able to 'substitute' for sons, resulting in an intensification of gender bias even among the better-off sections of the Indian society? In order to answer these questions, it is necessary to understand the nexus of economic, social, and cultural factors that underlie daughter discrimination. Based on extensive research, the essays in this book - by sociologists, demographers, economists, and gender specialists - provide a multidisciplinary perspective to the varied facets of increasing gender bias in contemporary India. The contributing scholars emphasize the need for a change in the attitudes of society towards girls as a lasting solution to this social epidemic.}},
  editor       = {{Sekher, T. V. and Hatti, Neelambar}},
  isbn         = {{81-3160323-7}},
  keywords     = {{daughter discrimination; sex selection; son preference; India; sex discrimination; sex distribution}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Book Editor}},
  publisher    = {{Rawat Publications}},
  title        = {{Unwanted daughters : Gender Discrimination in Modern India}},
  year         = {{2010}},
}