Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and Gender

We present results from a new representative telephonic survey, which confirms persistence of conservative gender and caste attitudes.  In particular, we find that high proportions of men and women in all of the social groups we study disapprove of women working outside the home, say that it is acce...

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Main Authors: Amit Thorat, Nazar Khalid, Nikhil Shrivastav, Payal Hathi, Dean Spears, Diane Coffey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brandeis University Library 2020-10-01
Series:Caste
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/172
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author Amit Thorat
Nazar Khalid
Nikhil Shrivastav
Payal Hathi
Dean Spears
Diane Coffey
author_facet Amit Thorat
Nazar Khalid
Nikhil Shrivastav
Payal Hathi
Dean Spears
Diane Coffey
author_sort Amit Thorat
collection DOAJ
description We present results from a new representative telephonic survey, which confirms persistence of conservative gender and caste attitudes.  In particular, we find that high proportions of men and women in all of the social groups we study disapprove of women working outside the home, say that it is acceptable for husbands to beat their wives, and would object to relatives marrying a Dalit person.  By analyzing data from the National Family Health Survey and the India Human Development Survey, we see that the outcomes associated with these attitudes are even more conservative: a smaller fraction of women work than those who say it is acceptable, a larger fraction of women experience violence in marriage than men who say it is acceptable, and an even smaller fraction of people have intercaste marriages than people who say they would not oppose. With a few exceptions, the attitudes and outcomes we study vary surprisingly little by respondent gender, caste, and religion.  Dr. Amdebkar’s legacy is indeed unfinished – people from all backgrounds must continue to work for the equality and dignity of women and Dalits.
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spelling doaj.art-6144260d5f4c433d9983fc63b1efbdc82022-12-21T18:45:39ZengBrandeis University LibraryCaste2639-49282020-10-011211610.26812/caste.v1i2.172172Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and GenderAmit Thorat0Nazar KhalidNikhil ShrivastavPayal HathiDean SpearsDiane CoffeyJawaharlal Nehru UniversityWe present results from a new representative telephonic survey, which confirms persistence of conservative gender and caste attitudes.  In particular, we find that high proportions of men and women in all of the social groups we study disapprove of women working outside the home, say that it is acceptable for husbands to beat their wives, and would object to relatives marrying a Dalit person.  By analyzing data from the National Family Health Survey and the India Human Development Survey, we see that the outcomes associated with these attitudes are even more conservative: a smaller fraction of women work than those who say it is acceptable, a larger fraction of women experience violence in marriage than men who say it is acceptable, and an even smaller fraction of people have intercaste marriages than people who say they would not oppose. With a few exceptions, the attitudes and outcomes we study vary surprisingly little by respondent gender, caste, and religion.  Dr. Amdebkar’s legacy is indeed unfinished – people from all backgrounds must continue to work for the equality and dignity of women and Dalits.https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/172gender, caste, religion, attitudes, india
spellingShingle Amit Thorat
Nazar Khalid
Nikhil Shrivastav
Payal Hathi
Dean Spears
Diane Coffey
Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and Gender
Caste
gender, caste, religion, attitudes, india
title Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and Gender
title_full Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and Gender
title_fullStr Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and Gender
title_full_unstemmed Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and Gender
title_short Persisting Prejudice: Measuring Attitudes and Outcomes by Caste and Gender
title_sort persisting prejudice measuring attitudes and outcomes by caste and gender
topic gender, caste, religion, attitudes, india
url https://journals.library.brandeis.edu/index.php/caste/article/view/172
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