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Women’s empowerment and fertility in rural Tanzania: a case of Igunga district

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dc.creator Massende Bugumba, Mabula.Emmanuel
dc.date 2014-11-27T20:38:57Z
dc.date 2014-11-27T20:38:57Z
dc.date 2010
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-25T08:53:48Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-25T08:53:48Z
dc.identifier Bugumba Massende,M.B(2010) Women’s empowerment and fertility in rural Tanzania: a case of Igunga district ,Morogoro:Sokoine University of Agriculture.
dc.identifier https://www.suaire.sua.ac.tz/handle/123456789/255
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/94172
dc.description This study was conducted to investigate the relationship between women’s empowerment and fertility in rural Tanzania. Data were collected from randomly selected 120 women in four randomly selected villages from two wards in Igunga District using a structured and non structured questionnaire. Descriptive and regression analyses using Statistical Package for Social Sciences were employed to determine the factors for fertility. Women’s empowerment was measured by five proxies: economic decision making, mobility, coercive control, family planning and contraceptive use, and family size decision making. Fertility status was measured by age specific fertility rates and total fertility rates. Results of descriptive analysis suggest that fertility of women was influenced by age of woman, age at first birth, household size, marital status, education, occupation, economic decision making, family size decision making, coercive control, and contraceptive use. Although income did not show influence on fertility, employment status of woman indicated high influence. The multiple regressions revealed that fertility level was attributed to factors of age, household size, education, family size decision making, age at first birth, and marital status which were statistically significant at p < 0.05 regression coefficients, implying that the number of children born increases with age of woman and household size and it decreases with increase in her education level, age at first birth, ability on family size decision making, and age at first marriage. It was observed that women’s empowerment is multidimensional, that is, different aspects do not necessarily co-vary together. A woman may be decisive in one or several aspects like in mobility and coercive control but not in other aspects like family size decision making. Thus, it has to be taken holistically. It is recommended that women’s empowerment and sexual and reproductive health should be institutionalised. Education system, beginning at lower levels syllabi, should emphasise women’s empowerment and sexual and reproductive health to men and women to make the wome youth especially in rural areas avoid higher fertility for the national development.
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en
dc.publisher Sokoine University of Agriculture
dc.subject Women’s empowerment
dc.subject Igunga District
dc.subject Economic decision making
dc.subject Family planning
dc.title Women’s empowerment and fertility in rural Tanzania: a case of Igunga district
dc.type Thesis


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