Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-4rdpn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T22:47:44.178Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Poverty, dowry and the ‘good match’: revisiting community perceptions and practices of child marriage in a rural setting in Bangladesh

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 November 2020

Kazi Nazrul Fattah*
Affiliation:
Connected Cities Lab, University of Melbourne, Australia
Suborna Camellia
Affiliation:
Radboud University, The Netherlands BRAC James P. Grant School of Public Health, BRAC University, Bangladesh
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

The high prevalence of child marriage in many South Asian countries is usually attributed to poverty, lack of access to education and economic opportunities and gender inequitable cultural norms. Yet in Bangladesh, despite economic growth, mass female education and concerted efforts to eliminate child marriage, its prevalence remains very high. This paper explores community-level perceptions, attitudes and practices relating to child marriage in a rural setting in Bangladesh with the aim of understanding the collective discourses of child marriage in the country and identify the factors shaping these. The study was based on exploratory sequential mixed-method research, with qualitative data collected through group discussions and interviews with 64 participants and quantitative survey data from 3344 participants from the Rangpur district of northern Bangladesh in 2014. The findings suggest that, in addition to the already identified drivers, the notion of a ‘good match’, where the wife is subservient to her husband, is one of the main motivations for marrying off girls early in this region of Bangladesh. Reducing poverty and educating girls may not be adequate to address the persistent problem of child marriage in all Bangladeshi contexts and emphasis needs to be given to transforming the prevailing idea of a ‘good match’ to one of an ‘equal match’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Amin, S, Asadullah, MN, Hossain, S and Wahhaj, Z (2017a) Can conditional transfers eradicate child marriage? Economic and Political Weekly 52(6), 2022.Google Scholar
Amin, S, Asadullah, MN, Hossain, S and Wahhaj, Z (2017b) Eradicating child marriage in the Commonwealth: is investment in girls’ education sufficient? The Round Table 106(2), 221223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amin, S and Huq, L (2008) Marriage Considerations in Sending Girls to School in Bangladesh: Some Qualitative Evidence. Population Council, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asadullah, MN and Wahhaj, Z (2016) Child marriage law and freedom of choice. Economic and Political Weekly 51(3), 2426.Google Scholar
Asadullah, MN and Wahhaj, Z (2019) Early marriage, social networks and the transmission of norms. Economica 86, 801831.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrientos, A, Byrne, J, Peña, P and Villa, JM (2014) Social transfers and child protection in the South. Children and Youth Services Review 47, 105112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BBS (2015) Trends, Patterns and Determinants of Marriage in Bangladesh. Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics, Dhaka.Google Scholar
Bruce, J (2003) Married adolescent girls: human rights, health, and developmental needs of a neglected majority. Economic and Political Weekly 38(41), 43784380.Google Scholar
Caldwell, BK (1992) Marriage in Sri Lanka: a century of change. Thesis, Australian National University.Google Scholar
Caldwell, BK (2005) Factors affecting female age at marriage in South Asia. Asian Population Studies 1(3), 283301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chowdhury, FD (2004) The socio-cultural context of child marriage in a Bangladeshi village. International Journal of Social Welfare 13(3), 244253.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chowdhury, FD (2010) Dowry, women, and law in Bangladesh. International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family 24(2), 198221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chowdhury, FI and Trovato, F (1994) The role and status of women and the timing of marriage in five Asian countries. Journal of Comparative Family Studies 25(2), 143157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Creswell, JW and Clark, VLP (2017) Designing and Conducting Mixed Methods Research. Sage, Thousand Oaks.Google Scholar
Das, N, Yasmin, R, Ara, J, Kamruzzaman, M, Davis, P, Behrman, JA, Roy, S and Quisumbing, AR (2013) How do intrahousehold dynamics change when assets are transferred to women? International Food Policy Research Institute Discussion Paper No. 01317. URL: https://cgspace.cgiar.org/bitstream/handle/10568/67764/DP11.pdf?sequence=1 (accessed September 2019).Google Scholar
De Silva, WI (2014) Still the “Ireland of Asia”? Declining female age at marriage in Sri Lanka. Journal of Family Issues 35(12), 16051623.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Desai, S and Andrist, L (2010) Gender scripts and age at marriage in India. Demography 47(3), 667687.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gökçe, B, Özşahin, A and Zencir, M (2007) Determinants of adolescent pregnancy in an urban area in Turkey: a population-based case-control study. Journal of Biosocial Science 39(2), 301311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasan, T, Muhaddes, T, Camellia, S, Selim, N and Rashid, SF (2014) Prevalence and experiences of intimate partner violence against women with disabilities in Bangladesh: results of an explanatory sequential mixed-method study. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 29(17), 31053126.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hossen, A (2013) Bhangchhe mayeder shorir, bhangchhe shongshar [Mothers’ Health Deteriorating, Families Breaking Down]. Prothom Alo. URL: http://archive.prothom-alo.com/detail/news/319534 (accessed August 2020).Google Scholar
Hossain, MG, Mahumud, RA and Saw, A (2016) Prevalence of child marriage among Bangladeshi women and trend of change over time. Journal of Biosocial Science 48(4), 530538.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Islam, MK, Haque, MR and Hossain, MB (2016) Regional variations in child marriage in Bangladesh. Journal of Biosocial Science 48(5), 694708.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jain, S and Kurz, K (2007) New Insights on Preventing Child Marriage: A Global Analysis of Factors and Programs. International Centre for Research on Women, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Jones, GW and Yeung, WJ (2014) Marriage in Asia. Journal of Family Issues 35(12), 15671583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kassan, D and Mahery, P (2009) Special child protective measures in the Children’s Act. In Boezaart, T (ed.) Child Law in South Africa. Juta, Cape Town, pp. 185224.Google Scholar
Koski, A and Heymann, J (2018) Child marriage in the United States: how common is the practice, and which children are at greatest risk? Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health 50(2), 5965.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Loaiza, E and Wong, S (2012) Marrying Too Young: End Child Marriage. UNFPA, New York.Google Scholar
Mahmud, S and Amin, S (2006) Girls’ schooling and marriage in rural Bangladesh. In Hannum, E and Fuller, B (eds) Children’s Lives and Schooling Across Societies. Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp. 7199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McFarlane, J, Nava, A, Gilroy, H and Maddoux, J (2016) Child brides, forced marriage, and partner violence in America: tip of an iceberg revealed. Obstetrics & Gynecology 127(4), 706713.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Malhotra, A, Warner, A, McGonagle, A and Lee-Rife, S (2011) Solutions to End Child Marriage. International Centre for Research on Women, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Mathur, S, Greene, M and Malhotra, A (2003) Too Young to Wed: The Lives, Rights and Health of Young Married Girls. International Centre for Research on Women, Washington DC.Google Scholar
NIPORT, Mitra and Associates and ICF International (2013) Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2011. NIPORT, Mitra and Associates and ICF International, Dhaka and Maryland, USA.Google Scholar
NIPORT, Mitra and Associates and ICF International (2016) Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2014. NIPORT, Mitra and Associates, and ICF International, Dhaka and Maryland, USA.Google Scholar
Pandey, S (2017) Persistent nature of child marriage among women even when it is illegal: the case of Nepal. Children and Youth Services Review 73, 242247.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parsons, J, Edmeades, J, Kes, A, Petroni, S, Sexton, M and Wodon, Q (2015) Economic impacts of child marriage: a review of the literature. Review of Faith & International Affairs 13(3), 1222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peterson, BE, Kim, R, McCarthy, JM, Park, CJ and Plamondon, LT (2011) Authoritarianism and arranged marriage in Bangladesh and Korea. Journal of Research in Personality 45(6), 622630.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raj, A (2010) When the mother is a child: the impact of child marriage on the health and human rights of girls. Archives of Disease in Childhood 95(11), 931935.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raj, A and Boehmer, U (2013) Girl child marriage and its association with national rates of HIV, maternal health, and infant mortality across 97 countries. Violence Against Women 19(4), 536551.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raj, A, Gomez, CS and Silverman, JG (2014a) Multisectorial Afghan perspectives on girl child marriage: foundations for change do exist in Afghanistan. Violence Against Women 20(12), 14891505.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raj, A, McDougal, L, Silverman, JG and Rusch, MLA (2014b) Cross-sectional time series analysis of associations between education and girl child marriage in Bangladesh, India, Nepal and Pakistan, 1991–2011. PLoS One 9(9), e106210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raj, A, Saggurti, N, Balaiah, D and Silverman, JG (2009) Prevalence of child marriage and its effect on fertility and fertility-control outcomes of young women in India: a cross-sectional, observational study. The Lancet 373(9678), 18831889.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rubio, G (2014) How love conquered marriage: Theory and Evidence on the Disappearance of Arranged Marriages. URL: https://kingcenter.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/Rubio_Gabriela_How%20Love%20Conquered.pdf (accessed October 2020).Google Scholar
Solotaroff, JL and Pande, RP (2014) Violence Against Women and Girls: Lessons from South Asia. The World Bank, Washington, DC.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Streatfield, PK, Kamal, N, Ahsan, KZ and Nahar, Q (2015) Early marriage in Bangladesh. Asian Population Studies 11(1), 94110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teddlie, C and Tashakkori, A (2009) Foundations of Mixed Methods Research: Integrating Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches in the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Sage, Thousand Oaks, CA.Google Scholar
UNICEF (2009) The State of the World’s Children: Maternal and Newborn Health, 2009. UNICEF, New York.Google Scholar
UNICEF (2014) Ending Child Marriage: Progress and Prospects. UNICEF, New York.Google Scholar
Verma, R, Sinha, T and Khanna, T (2013) Asia Child Marriage Initiative: Summary of Research in Bangladesh, India And Nepal. Plan International, Bangkok.Google Scholar
Wahhaj, Z (2018) An economic model of early marriage. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 152, 147176.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warria A (2017) Forced child marriages as a form of child trafficking. Children and Youth Services Review 79, 274279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, SC (2013) Patriarchal investments: marriage, dowry and economic change in rural Bangladesh. Bath Papers in International Development and Wellbeing, No. 19. Centre for Development Studies, University of Bath, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
World Bank (2016) Bangladesh Interactive Poverty Maps. URL: http://www.worldbank.org/en/data/interactive/2016/11/10/bangladesh-poverty-maps (accessed September 2019).Google Scholar
Yarrow, E, Apland, K, Anderson, K and Hamilton, C (2015) Getting the Evidence: Asia Child Marriage Initiative. Plan International and Coram International, London.Google Scholar
Yasukawa, Y and Gough, J (2016) Child Marriage: Not Just a Girls’ Problem but an Economic Disaster. URL: https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/10/child-marriage-girls-economic-distaster-unicef-unfpa/ (accessed September 2019).Google Scholar
Young, KA and Hassan, S (2018) An assessment of the prevalence, perceived significance, and response to dowry solicitation and domestic violence in Bangladesh. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 33(19), 29683000.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed