gender gap - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Thu, 18 Dec 2014 03:07:50 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg gender gap - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 PM warns prospective women MPs not to neglect God-given domestic duties https://cathnews.co.nz/2014/12/19/pm-warns-prospective-women-mps-not-neglect-god-given-domestic-duties/ Thu, 18 Dec 2014 18:03:01 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=67453

Samoa's Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi says women should not let their drive and determination to enter politics make them neglect their God given duties as mothers. He said women hold families, villages, and churches together and they are also the backbone of the country. Tuilaepa was speaking at the final sitting of Parliament for Read more

PM warns prospective women MPs not to neglect God-given domestic duties... Read more]]>
Samoa's Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi says women should not let their drive and determination to enter politics make them neglect their God given duties as mothers.

He said women hold families, villages, and churches together and they are also the backbone of the country.

Tuilaepa was speaking at the final sitting of Parliament for the year on Wednesday which was attended by women taking part in a programme promoting women's participation in Parliament.

Samoa passed a law last year which reserves five seats or 10 percent of the forty nine seats in Parliament for women.

The Prime Minister said the government had devised a way to bring more women into Parliament but he hopes that in their quest to become MPs, they will not neglect the roles for which they were chosen by God.

He said Samoa needed tall, strong boys to play rugby, adding that Samoa's population has stood at l80,000 for about 20 years, while Fiji's population has reached almost 1 million.

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PM warns prospective women MPs not to neglect God-given domestic duties]]>
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Selective sex selection of foetuses widens India's gender gap https://cathnews.co.nz/2011/05/27/selective-sex-selection-of-foetuses-widens-indias-gender-gap/ Thu, 26 May 2011 19:03:18 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=4928

Aborting female foetuses in India means there are 7.1 million fewer girls than boys aged up to six. The gender-gap has widened by a million in the last 10 years. Selective sex selection Indian families where the first child has been a girl, more and more parents with access to prenatal ultrasound testing are sex-selecting Read more

Selective sex selection of foetuses widens India's gender gap... Read more]]>
Aborting female foetuses in India means there are 7.1 million fewer girls than boys aged up to six.

The gender-gap has widened by a million in the last 10 years.

Selective sex selection Indian families where the first child has been a girl, more and more parents with access to prenatal ultrasound testing are sex-selecting their second child. If the child is a female they abort it in the hope that a subsequent pregnancy will yield a boy, said the study, published in The Lancet.

If the first child was a boy, however, there was no drop in the girl-boy ratio for the second child, showing that families - especially those better off and more educated - are far more likely to abort girls if the firstborn is also female.

The increasingly lopsided ratio of girls to boys is larger in wealthy households than poorer ones, the researchers reported.

Between 1980 and 2010, they estimate, four to 12 million girls were aborted because of their sex.

The female shortfall for the zero-to-six age bracket was 6.0 million in 2001, and 4.2 million in 1991.

"Increases in selective abortion of girls are probably because of persistent son preference combined with decreases in fertility," the authors say.

The mean number of children per Indian woman fell from 3.8 in 1990 to 2.6 in 2008.

Selective abortion of female foetuses accounts for two to four per cent of female pregnancies in India, roughly 300,000 to 600,000 per year out of 13.3 to 13.7 million carrying a girl in 2010, the study found.

Declines were much greater in mothers who had gone to school for at least 10 years than in mothers with no education at all. The same trend held true for wealthier households compared to poorer ones.

"The financial incentive for physicians to undertake this illegal activity seems to be far greater than the penalties associated with breaking the law," S.V. Subramanian of the Harvard School of Public Health said in a commentary, also in The Lancet.

In the study, researchers led by Prabhat Jha of the Centre for Global Health at the University of Toronto, analysed census data from 2011 and earlier.

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Selective sex selection of foetuses widens India's gender gap]]>
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