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This paper proposes a conceptual framework for examining the impact of family planning on six areas of women's lives: personal autonomy and self-esteem; physical and psychological health; educational attainment; employment and economic resources; family relationships; and public standing. It also identifies priorities for future research.Editor's note: The full text of this paper is not posted on FHI's Home Page. For a copy of the No. WP94-02 paper, please write: Publications Assistant, FHI, PO Box 13950, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709 USA Summary When the modern family planning movement began in the United States and Europe in the early 20th century, its primary purpose was to liberate women from the social and health consequences of unwanted pregnancies. When organized family planning programs reached the Third World, beginning with India in the early 1950s, these programs were viewed as the means to alleviate the pressure of rapid population growth on economic development. In the last decades, the purpose of family planning has broadened to encompass both these objectives and the objective of improving women's health and welfare. Although women are seen as obvious beneficiaries of family planning, too little attention has been given to assessing the impact of family planning on their lives. Previous research has examined how women's roles and status influence their use of contraception and their fertility. In this paper, the authors reverse the equation and examine the opposite causal direction -- how family planning affects women's lives. A central hypothesis is that family planning can be a catalyst for change and that family planning programs have the potential to enhance the quality of women's lives. The conceptual framework presented in this paper is based on research and extensive discussions with key social scientists concerned with women and family planning. The purpose of the framework is to suggest how family planning might influence women's lives. Two pathways of influences are examined:
Family planning programs are hypothesized to affect women's lives in at least six areas:
In addition to contraceptive users themselves, other people are affected by family planning use, including children, other women, men and society in general. Family planning programs vary in their characteristics and elements. Consequently, programs may differ in the ways they influence contraceptive use, employment opportunities, and other aspects of women's lives. These variations must be taken into account in any explanatory model of the effect of family planning on women's lives. Chief among the elements that need to be considered are:
Women's use of contraceptives to limit family size or to delay the birth of the first child may not have an equally positive effect on all their lives. A woman's individual characteristics -- age, economic situation, marital status, religion and educational level, as well as the number, sex and age of her children -- affect her decision to use contraception. These characteristics also affect method choice or the decision to seek work in a family planning program. If a woman decides to stop childbearing after having six children, one more child may not make much difference in terms of her future educational and employment opportunities. By contrast, if a woman delays her first baby until after she finishes her schooling, this may affect not only her educational level but also her future employment, since education tends to have a strong effect on an individual's income level, regardless of development level. Apart from individual characteristics, sociocultural factors may either encourage or prevent women from fully exercising their choice to use contraception or to work in family planning programs. These factors include: prevailing expectations and norms regarding women's roles; family systems that promote or discourage high fertility and son preference; opportunities for women's social and economic independence through education, employment, inheritance, and property laws; and restrictions (e.g., religious or legal) on access to family planning information and services. Among the important questions for future research on contraceptives users are:
Among the important questions for future research on women employed in family planning programs are:
In their studies of women as family planning employees, researchers should consider the impact of family planning on unskilled, lower-level field workers; skilled female medical and paramedical staff; and women in mid- to top-management positions. Family planning is already a major force for social change in developed and developing nations. The paper hypothesizes that family planning affects change primarily through involvement of women -- women as users of contraceptive methods and services and women as employees in family planning programs. Through future studies on both contraceptive users and employees of family planning programs, researchers will gain a better understanding of the impact of family planning programs on women's lives. This understanding can, in turn, lead to improvements in policies and programs that will ultimately benefit women. Framework on the Impact of Family Planning Programs on Women's Lives -- Sawon Hong, PhD Editor's note: The full text of this paper is not posted on FHI's Home Page. For a copy of the No. WP94-02 paper, please write: Publications Assistant, FHI, PO Box 13950, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709 USA |
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