Child schooling and contraceptive use in rural Africa: A Ghanaian case study

Type Journal Article - Population Research and Policy Review
Title Child schooling and contraceptive use in rural Africa: A Ghanaian case study
Author(s)
Volume 24
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2005
Page numbers 1-25
Abstract
In this study, I examine the contributions of childrens schooling to fertility decline in Africa. I use cross-sectional data collected in the late 1980s to look at how household child schooling patterns and community access to schools affect contraceptive use among rural Ghanaian women. My results indicate that the schooling of children is associated very strongly with increased use of modern and traditional contraceptive use and thereby suggest that educational policy has played a role in initiating and sustaining fertility decline in Ghana and possibly elsewhere in Africa.

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