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Title
The beginnings of family limitation in the three towns of the Sudan |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/123348 |
Date
1979 |
Author(s)
Richard, Joseph |
Abstract
The aim of the thesis is to study the changes that have occurred
at the beginning of family limitation in the Three Towns (Khartoum,
Khartoum North and Omdurman) of the Sudan, especially in fertility and
the adoption of contraception.
It is found that although the fertility of women in the Three Towns
is still high, the Towns are witnessing the emergence of fertility
differentials between groups at different levels of modernization. The
wife's education and the practice of the wife accompanying her husband
to public entertainments have the strongest relationship to the number
of children ever bom. The level of acceptance of family planning is
also high.
With the extension of education and the spread of mass communications,
changes in family relationships appear to be inevitable. These lead to
the modem nuclear family in which egalitarian relationships in decisionmaking
prevail. The lower fertility observed among those in egalitarian
marriages is a forerunner of fertility transition in the Three Towns. |
Subject(s)
Birth control Case studiesSudan; Fertility, Human Case studiesSudan |
Language
en |
Type of publication
Thesis (PhD) |
Format
1v |
Identifier
b1274320 |
Repository
Canberra - Australian National University
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Added to C-A: 2018-11-22;13:04:11 |
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