Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural Bangladesh

This research examines the gendered consequences of the international low-fertility agenda, as it has been realized in an era of a globalized labor market, by documenting some of the ways that families in rural Bangladesh have shifted filial responsibilities between daughters and sons. Such shifts a...

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Main Author: Roslyn Fraser Schoen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lodz University Press 2018-09-01
Series:Qualitative Sociology Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/3592
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author Roslyn Fraser Schoen
author_facet Roslyn Fraser Schoen
author_sort Roslyn Fraser Schoen
collection DOAJ
description This research examines the gendered consequences of the international low-fertility agenda, as it has been realized in an era of a globalized labor market, by documenting some of the ways that families in rural Bangladesh have shifted filial responsibilities between daughters and sons. Such shifts are occurring in a context of new demographic and economic realities that have been largely shaped by national policies and pressure from international organizations. Using qualitative interview data, this study examines how, in the context of declining family size, male labor migration, and increasing life expectancy, women and girls are expected to take on a larger share of filial responsibilities. While sons’ responsibilities narrow to include economic contributions through wage earning and remittances, expectations for daughters are expanding and may include earning a wage, as well as caring for both natal and marital relatives. This paper also seeks to problematize the conflation of fertility decline, poverty reduction, and women’s well-being by arguing that women’s empowerment is not a natural result of smaller families.
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spelling doaj.art-7398b5990da54836a37080bcdacbc2d12022-12-21T21:43:54ZengLodz University PressQualitative Sociology Review1733-80772018-09-0114310612410.18778/1733-8077.14.3.063592Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural BangladeshRoslyn Fraser Schoen0Texas A&M University—Central Texas, U.S.AThis research examines the gendered consequences of the international low-fertility agenda, as it has been realized in an era of a globalized labor market, by documenting some of the ways that families in rural Bangladesh have shifted filial responsibilities between daughters and sons. Such shifts are occurring in a context of new demographic and economic realities that have been largely shaped by national policies and pressure from international organizations. Using qualitative interview data, this study examines how, in the context of declining family size, male labor migration, and increasing life expectancy, women and girls are expected to take on a larger share of filial responsibilities. While sons’ responsibilities narrow to include economic contributions through wage earning and remittances, expectations for daughters are expanding and may include earning a wage, as well as caring for both natal and marital relatives. This paper also seeks to problematize the conflation of fertility decline, poverty reduction, and women’s well-being by arguing that women’s empowerment is not a natural result of smaller families.https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/3592GlobalizationDevelopmentFamilyGenderFertilityPopulation PolicyBangladesh
spellingShingle Roslyn Fraser Schoen
Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural Bangladesh
Qualitative Sociology Review
Globalization
Development
Family
Gender
Fertility
Population Policy
Bangladesh
title Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural Bangladesh
title_full Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural Bangladesh
title_fullStr Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural Bangladesh
title_short Shifting the Burden to Daughters: A Qualitative Examination of Population Policy, Labor Migration, and Filial Responsibility in Rural Bangladesh
title_sort shifting the burden to daughters a qualitative examination of population policy labor migration and filial responsibility in rural bangladesh
topic Globalization
Development
Family
Gender
Fertility
Population Policy
Bangladesh
url https://czasopisma.uni.lodz.pl/qualit/article/view/3592
work_keys_str_mv AT roslynfraserschoen shiftingtheburdentodaughtersaqualitativeexaminationofpopulationpolicylabormigrationandfilialresponsibilityinruralbangladesh