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The Dowry System in Northern India: Women’s Attitudes and Social Change

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The Dowry System in Northern India: Women’s Attitudes and Social Change
Author(s)Srinivasan, Padma; Lee, Gary R.
AbstractIn spite of modernization and women’s increasing role in the market economy, the practice of the dowry in India is becoming more widespread, and the value of dowries is increasing. There are many well-documented adverse consequences of the dowry system, particularly for women. This is a study of attitudes toward the dowry system among married women in the northern province of Bihar (N = 4,603), in which the dowry has strong roots in tradition. Hypotheses regarding antecedents involving attachment to tradition, exposure to modernizing influences, and self-interest were developed. Each set of factors has some effects, and nearly two thirds of the women in the survey disapprove of the dowry. The practice may be quite resistant to change, however, because its social and economic consequences carry tangible benefits in an increasingly materialistic culture.
IssueNo5
Pages1108-1117
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceJournal of Marriage and the Family
VolumeNo66
PubDateDecember 2004
ISBN_ISSN0022-2445

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