Data di Pubblicazione:
2024
Citazione:
Bertocchi, G., A., Dimico e C., Falco. "Family Planning and Ethnic Heritage: Evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa" Working paper, DEMB WORKING PAPER SERIES, Dipartimento di Economia Marco Biagi, 2024. https://doi.org/10.25431/11380_1362077
Abstract:
Family planning is a critical issue in countries, particularly those in sub-Saharan
Africa, where high fertility rates coexist with low contraceptive use alongside adverse perinatal outcomes. Using a combination of ethnographic, ecological, and
folklore data, we investigate the role played in this context by postpartum sexual abstinence, an extensively documented practice that, in preindustrial societies,
finds its biological justification as a means to safeguard child survival. First, we
show that the duration of contemporary postpartum abstinence increases with the
duration of ancestral postpartum sex taboos within a woman’s ethnic group. Second, postpartum abstinence is de facto pronatalist, as it increases the number of
children ever born to a woman. At the same time, it increases the number of children of a woman who have died; lengthens birth intervals though not sufficiently
to meet recommended guidelines; and increases neonatal death and child stunting.
Exploring the underlying mechanisms reveals that postpartum abstinence is associated with patriarchal cultural norms and that the motivation for its adoption is
that it serves as a purification ritual. Overall, our findings question the biological rationale for postpartum abstinence as a means to protect child health, while
aligning with anthropological evidence documenting its adoption as a ritual.
Tipologia CRIS:
Working paper
Elenco autori:
Bertocchi, G.; Dimico, A.; Falco, C.
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