1 / 22

Does matrilineal kinship weaken the marital bond Evidence from Ghana

15/05/2012. Kinship structure and marital dissolution . 2. Research context. Theoretical formulations about family transitions, particularly marital outcomes, in sub-Saharan Africa assume that the changes underway in the region are the result of modernizing processes, particularly Africa's encounter

Sophia
Download Presentation

Does matrilineal kinship weaken the marital bond Evidence from Ghana

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


    1. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 1 Does matrilineal kinship weaken the marital bond? Evidence from Ghana Stephen Obeng Gyimah, PhD Department of Sociology Queen’s University Kingston, Ontario gyimahs@post.queensu.ca Baffour K. Takyi, PhD Department of Sociology University of Akron Akron, Ohio btakyi@uakron.edu Prepared for presentation at the annual meetings of the Canadian Population Society, Winnipeg, June 2-5 2004.

    2. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 2 Research context Theoretical formulations about family transitions, particularly marital outcomes, in sub-Saharan Africa assume that the changes underway in the region are the result of modernizing processes, particularly Africa’s encounter with the outside world due to its long history with European imperialism and colonialism. Yet still, others argue that the region’s rapid rate of urbanization, estimated at about 4.4 per cent per annum and changes in women’s economic position arising from increasing education may be the driving force behind the fragmentation and changes that we are seeing in African families.

    3. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 3 While a common theme behind recent scholarship on the African family focuses on the role of social change in explaining family transitions, few examine the potential influence of internal processes within African societies and their impact on family life. In this paper, we examine the role of family ties (which we define in terms of lineage or kinship allegiance) on the duration of first marriages in Ghana. Despite this growing research interest on the African family, surprisingly little of existing deals with marital stability and dissolution .

    4. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 4 The limited research on marital disruption is that, until quite recently, the focus of most African demographic researchers was in explaining the region’s high fertility levels that were viewed as detrimental to socioeconomic developments. Because of the interest on fertility-related issues, a sizable amount of existing demographic studies on postcolonial Africa investigate the determinants of high birth rates, and the conditions under which a transition from high to low birth rate would occur in the region. Given the paucity of studies on marital instability, findings from our study could provide insights into family dynamics and processes in the sub-Saharan region.

    5. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 5 In exploring how family ties affect marital stability in the context of Ghana, we are particularly interested in assessing a key hypothesis that is derived from the institutional theoretical framework that suggests that family ties, particularly matrilineal ties, undermine the marital bond and thus, increase women’s risk for marital disruption (see e.g., Oppong, 1974; 1977; Poewe, 1978; Hagan, 1983; Hutchison, 1990).

    6. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 6 Three main factors influenced our choice of Ghana as the setting for testing our hypothesis. First, roughly half of Ghana’s population is comprised of the matrilineal Akan and the other half are non-matrilineal (Gaisie, 1981). These two family arrangements serve as the basis of Ghanaian social organizations and are reproduced in succeeding generations through carefully crafted socialization processes and systems of rewards (Dodoo and Tempenis, 2000). These differential rewards, expectations, and influence is likely to have a differential impact on family dynamics in the country. This is particularly the case in matrilineal societies where individuals tend to defer more to the preferences and needs of their lineage kin than in non-matrilineal settings. Why Ghana?

    7. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 7 Second, evidence is emerging to indicate that a transformation is underway in many African families (see e.g., Bledsoe, 1990; Lloyd and Gage-Brandon, 1993). With regard to Ghana, Amoateng and Heaton (1989) found women who married in the 1970s to be twice as likely to report a divorce as those who married in earlier decades. Lloyd and Gage-Brandon (1993), and Gage and Njogu (1994) have also reported that during the 1970s, about 40% of ever-married women between the ages of 40-49 in Ghana reported a marital dissolution, with this figure increasing to a high of 60.8% by the 1980s (Gage and Njogu 1994). Despite these observations, researchers disagree on the forces that are influencing these recent transitions in family life in Ghana.

    8. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 8 Another reason for using Ghana is that data from Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in that country during the 1980s and 1990s have measures that allow us to distinguish between the two predominant family traditions and ties: matrilineal and non-matrilineal ties for the study. Using this categorization, we estimate hazard models to examine the duration of first marriage to address the question of whether women from matrilineal family backgrounds experience more disruption than their non-matrilineal counterparts. Because the disruptive-effect thesis is predicated on the assumption that in matrilineal societies women tend to have more support and also autonomy in their social relations than their non-matrilineal counterparts (Clignet, 1970; Poewe, 1978; Takyi, 2001), we hypothesize that the risk of marital disruption will be greater among matrilineal than non-matrilineal women.

    9. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 9 Studies on marital stability have in the recent past explained the reported “fragility” of African marriages in terms of structural forces. This thesis argues that social changes arising from what is considered as modernizing influences and the introduction of Western ideas and norms into the region have something to do with recent marital transitions (Kaufmann and Meekers, 1998; Takyi, 2001; McDonald, 1985; Caldwell, 1982). While acknowledging the possible influence of micro-level factors such as age at marriage, and increasing levels of women’s education on marital stability, the undue emphasis on structural forces ignore the potential role of internal and institutional forces such as family ties that could potentially affect family and marital outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa. Background

    10. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 10 The issue of whether kinship ties influence marital outcomes is important given the overwhelming influence of lineage or kinship ties in Africa. Indeed, research from the region have increasingly pointed to the saliency of lineal ties to our understanding of childbearing and rearing patterns (Page, 1989), and overall reproductive behavior (Caldwell, 1982; Lesthaeghe, 1984; Caldwell and Caldwell, 1987), and also divorce (Takyi, 2001). In the context of West Africa, Caldwell (1995) also notes that family members rarely leave the extended family, with women traditionally worshipping in their households of origin even after marriage.

    11. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 11 More importantly, women and their children tend to be accepted readily back into their families of origin if their marriages break up, a practice that is common among matrilineal kin members. These dynamics, coupled with the ambiguous position of the conjugal family vis-ŕ-vis lineal could affect intra-family relations which could contribute to the destabilization of the marital union.

    12. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 12 Three main mechanisms through which matrilineal family ties can affect the stability of the conjugal unit. 1) under the matrilineal family system, married couples rarely pool their resources together for the benefit of the conjugal family unit (Oppong, 1983a, 1983b). While feminists scholars would argue that such a practice provide women with some level of autonomy from their spouses, the lack of a joint account is consistent with the traditional belief under the matrilineal system (especially as practice in Ghana) that men and women should give priority to their matrilineal kin over their own spouses (Clark (1999). Takyi (2001) and Dodoo (1998) have argued that the practice of maintaining separate marital accounts, plus the spousal allegiance of the wife to her own maternal family of origin, could undermine the authority of the husband, weaken and compromise the marital unit, and provide women and men with different cost and benefits calculations, which could ultimately influence the wife’s marital decisions. Theoretical framework

    13. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 13 2. the second borrows its ideas from rationale choice theory (see e.g., Klein, 2002). Consistent with this view, it has been suggested that the transactions that lead to the exchange of resources between family members in the form of bridewealth payments prior to the consummation of the union may influence the wife’s actions within the marriage. 3. The third is the status of women of matrilineal descent . Research on the status of women in the developing world have pointed to the dependency-relationship that arises between couples when the wife rely on the husband for financial support. Under the matrilineal system of descent, family members are guaranteed significant social support, benefits and freedom not found among non-matrilineal societies. These benefits may include for example valued resources such as access to land (see e.g., O'Rourke, 1995). Besides, non-biological members tend to get significant support and benefits outside their own conjugal family unit. Mechanisms linking lineage ties to marital outcomes

    14. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 14 Matrilineal family ties could weaken family cohesion thereby increasing the rate of marital disruption. Hence, we expect the risk of marital dissolution to be higher among matrilineal than non-matrilineal women. The relative degree of autonomy that matrilineal women derive from their non-conjugal family members could in turn increase women’s relative risk for divorce. Thus, we expect rates matrilineal rather than non-matrilineal women to have lower duration of marriages. Summary of key hypotheses

    15. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 15 Methodology The present analysis is based on pooled data from ever-married women interviewed in the 1988, 1993, and 1998 Ghana Demographic and Health Surveys [GDHS]. The GDHS is a nationally representative, stratified, self-weighting probability sample survey of women aged15 to 49 years. The merged file yielded a sample size of 10, 843 ever-married women.

    16. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 16 Measures Duration of first marriage was used as the dependent variable. The main independent variable, kinship structure, was derived from the question on ethnicity. Coded as matrilineal or non matrilineal. For the multivariate models, we controlled for socio-demographic factors that have been linked to marital stability, including religion, education, place of residence, presence of children in the household, type of marital union, age at first marriage, history of premarital births, and marriage cohort. These are factors that have been shown to influence marital outcomes.

    17. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 17 Analytical model Because the duration of first marriage is right-censored at the time of the survey, standard regression procedures are deemed inadequate. For our study, Cox proportional hazards models are used to assess the links between matrilineal family ties and the duration of first marriage. We examined the proportionality assumption by using the the stphtest in STATA

    18. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 18 Findings

    19. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 19 Figure 1 describes the relationship between the duration of first marriage among matrilineal and non-matrilineal women. The survival plot suggests a significant difference between the matrilineal and non-matrilineal women when it comes to their first marriages. At all durations, we find evidence that the proportion of matrilineal Akan women who experienced a marital disruption was higher than non-matrilineal women. For example, at 15 years of marriage, about 25% of Akan marriages had been dissolved compared with only 10% of non-Akan marriages

    20. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 20 Multivariate Findings

    21. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 21 Overall, the results indicate that matriliny has a strong and robust effect on the duration of marriage. In Model 1, there is evidence that the matrilineal Akans have a signicantly higher risk of marital disruption -- the risk being 57 percent higher--than their non-Akan counterparts. In Model 2, the effect of kinship ties remains strong and robust, suggesting that religion does not explain kin differences in marital duration. In Model 3, the effects of kin are shown to be independent of socio-economic factors of education and place of residence. Across models, there is evidence of a robust effect of kin ties on marital duration affirming its independence These results suggest that the ethnic differences in marital duration cannot be attributed to socio-economic and demographic factors, and thus provide support for our hypotheses.

    22. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 22 Summary In all our models, we found empirical support for the reported anthropological findings with regard to the potential linkages between matrilineal social organizations and marital instability in Africa. The fact that family ties is an important predictor of marital duration should in no way be construed to mean that other structural processes are not relevant in the context of Africa.

    23. 16/05/2012 Kinship structure and marital dissolution 23 Summary Indeed, as the case is around the world, social changes and globalization are having immense influence on social relations and family processes in Africa as well. Thus, in arguing that cultural processes are relevant for our understanding of marital outcomes in Africa, what we argue here is that, in addition to the widely reported variables associated with structural changes, researchers need to consider the cultural influences which could confound marital decisions and outcomes in a region where family ties are salient in everyday discourse.

More Related