2020
DOI: 10.1007/s13524-020-00888-2
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The Emergence of Educational Hypogamy in India

Abstract: With rising education among women across the world, educational hypergamy (women marrying men with higher education) has decreased over the last few decades in both developed and developing countries. Although a decrease in hypergamy is often accompanied by increasing homogamy (women marrying men with equal levels of education), our analyses for India based on a nationally representative survey of India (the India Human Development Survey), document a considerable rise in hypogamy (women marrying partners with… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 56 publications
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“…This finding is also in line with previous literature that suggests that societies that largely depend on land for their livelihoods are more likely to firmly hold the kinship ideals compared with their counterparts (Arokiasamy, 2007;Bagchi, 1981;Chakraborty & Kim, 2010). Notably, a central belief in eco-feminist theory is that "male ownership of land has led to a patriarchal structure in society" (Larsen, 2011;Thomas-Slayter & Rocheleau, 1995). Importantly, our refined India Patriarchy Index includes these issue of socio-economic domination, key elements not seen in the original European Patriarchy Index, that may be particularly relevant in LMIC settings where agrarian cultures still predominate and have heavy influence on the gendered norms that maintain patriarchy in these cultures.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This finding is also in line with previous literature that suggests that societies that largely depend on land for their livelihoods are more likely to firmly hold the kinship ideals compared with their counterparts (Arokiasamy, 2007;Bagchi, 1981;Chakraborty & Kim, 2010). Notably, a central belief in eco-feminist theory is that "male ownership of land has led to a patriarchal structure in society" (Larsen, 2011;Thomas-Slayter & Rocheleau, 1995). Importantly, our refined India Patriarchy Index includes these issue of socio-economic domination, key elements not seen in the original European Patriarchy Index, that may be particularly relevant in LMIC settings where agrarian cultures still predominate and have heavy influence on the gendered norms that maintain patriarchy in these cultures.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…A study exploring dowry in the Indian context suggested that more educated brides compete in a smaller market for grooms, as social norms typically require the groom to be more educated than the bride (Dalmia & Lawrence, 2004). In India, women are still expected to marry those with higher education than themselves; women who marry a man with lower education are consider gender-deviant (Lin et al, 2020). The proportion of working age women engaged in professional work is important, as in truly patriarchal societies women will not be encouraged to join the labor force outside their homes.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patrilocal exogamy, i.e., a woman resides with her husband's family after getting married, characterizes marriages in India. Partner selection is heavily based on assortative mating, i.e., spouses have the same or highly similar caste, religion, and economic backgrounds and may also be from the same village or community (Banerjee et al, 2013;Dyson and Moore, 1983;Goli et al, 2013;Lin et al, 2020;Rammohan and Vu, 2018). NFHS-4 asked women if they had lived in the same location (village or city ward ) since birth.…”
Section: Empirical Analysis: Fixed-effects Regression Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous research on hypergamy has also used couple's observed education to measure hypergamy in marital relationships (see, e.g. Bouchet‐Valat & Dutreuilh, 2015; Lin et al, 2020) since individuals' educational attainment is likely to be a reasonably good indicator of individual's long‐term social status.…”
Section: Datamentioning
confidence: 99%