Marital Status and Reproductive Performance in Kipsigis Women: Re-evaluating the Polygyny-Fertility Hypothesis
- 30 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Population Studies
- Vol. 43 (2) , 285-304
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0032472031000144126
Abstract
The effects of marital status on fertility and offspring survivorship are examined with data on six marriage cohorts of Kipsigis women, agro-pastoralists of south western Kenya. Neither marriage order, nor the average number of co-wives married to a man during a woman's reproductive years, is associated with completed family size, nor with any of the components of reproductive performance. The mechanisms whereby polygyny might potentially lower the reproductive performance of polygynously married women in the Kipsigis and other populations are discussed in some detail, with particular reference to resource shortages, sexual and economic favouritism, the observance of post partum taboos, disease, husband's age, co-wife co-operation, education, sterility, and age at menarche and marriage.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Factors Affecting Infant Care in the KipsigisJournal of Anthropological Research, 1985
- MARITAL FORM AND INFANT SURVIVAL AMONG THE MENDE OF RURAL UPPER BAMBARA CHIEFDOM, SIERRA-LEONE1982
- Female Fertility and Marital Form among the Mende of Rural Upper Bambara Chiefdom, Sierra LeoneEthnology, 1980