Type | Journal Article - Towards Interdisciplinarity |
Title | Demographic and anthropological perspectives on marriage and reproduction in Namibia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2010 |
Page numbers | 203-232 |
Abstract | Despite the work of early anthropological and demographic pioneers like Nancy HOWELL, Caroline BLEDSOE and Jack CALDWELL in the 1970s and 1980s, the more widespread sharing and exchange of methods, models and theories of the two disciplines only dates back to the 1990s. But scepticism on both sides has remained. Anthropologists lament the often problematic use of culture and context in demographic explanations while demographers perceive the empirical basis anthropologists draw their conclusions from as limited. The different anthropological and demographic perspectives are especially pronounced in the analysis of marriage. For demographers, the average age at marriage is one of the proximate determinants that influence reproductive outcomes through structuring the risk for pregnancy. Recently (2007), demographer John BONGAARTS has extended this perspective. In his discussion on how the delay of marriage in several African countries might increase the risk for an HIV infection, the social institution of marriage becomes a determinant for mortality. Contrary to the demographic treatment of marriage, the link between marriage, reproduction and mortality in anthropological research is more complex. Unlike demography’s treatment of marriage as an independent variable explaining the dependent variable fertility and – more recently – mortality, for anthropologists marriage (and non marriage) itself has to be explained. Using ethnographic data on reproduction and marriage of 329 households in Northwest Namibia and comparing the results with macro level demographic data, the aim of my paper is to demonstrate that only through the combination of demographic and anthropological methods and theories is it possible to understand the centrality of marriage and its absence in contemporary Namibia and other Southern African countries. |
» | Namibia - Population and Housing Census 2001 |