Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.

Although ICPD brought about an international consensus on the centrality of women's empowerment and gender equity as desired national goals, the conceptualization and measurement of empowerment in demography and economics have been largely understood in a relational and in a family welfare cont...

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Main Author: Tannistha Samanta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232526
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spelling doaj-aacdafcf29954069a4ad8831c24abe612021-03-03T21:45:06ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01155e023252610.1371/journal.pone.0232526Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.Tannistha SamantaAlthough ICPD brought about an international consensus on the centrality of women's empowerment and gender equity as desired national goals, the conceptualization and measurement of empowerment in demography and economics have been largely understood in a relational and in a family welfare context where women's altruistic behaviour within the household is tied either to developmental or child health outcomes. The goals of this study were twofold: (1) to offer an empirical examination of the household level empowerment measure through the theoretical construct of self-compassion and investigate its association with antenatal health, and (2) to ensure robust psychometric quality for this new measure. Drawing data from the nationally representative, multi-topic dataset of 42, 152 households, India Human Development Survey, IHDS II (2011-2012), the study performed a confirmatory factor analysis followed by an OLS estimation to investigate the association between a self-compassionate based empowerment and antenatal care. Empowerment was shown to be positively and significantly associated with antenatal care with significant age and education gradient. A woman's married status, her relation to the household head and joint family residence created conditions of restricted freedom in terms of her mobility, decision making and sociality. The empowerment measure showed inconsistent associations with social group affiliations and household wealth. The study provided an intellectual starting point to rethink the traditional formulations of empowerment by foregrounding its empirical measure within the relatively unexplored area of social psychology. In the process it addressed measurement gaps in the empowerment-health debate in India and beyond.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232526
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tannistha Samanta
spellingShingle Tannistha Samanta
Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tannistha Samanta
author_sort Tannistha Samanta
title Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.
title_short Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.
title_full Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.
title_fullStr Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.
title_full_unstemmed Women's empowerment as self-compassion?: Empirical observations from  India.
title_sort women's empowerment as self-compassion?: empirical observations from  india.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Although ICPD brought about an international consensus on the centrality of women's empowerment and gender equity as desired national goals, the conceptualization and measurement of empowerment in demography and economics have been largely understood in a relational and in a family welfare context where women's altruistic behaviour within the household is tied either to developmental or child health outcomes. The goals of this study were twofold: (1) to offer an empirical examination of the household level empowerment measure through the theoretical construct of self-compassion and investigate its association with antenatal health, and (2) to ensure robust psychometric quality for this new measure. Drawing data from the nationally representative, multi-topic dataset of 42, 152 households, India Human Development Survey, IHDS II (2011-2012), the study performed a confirmatory factor analysis followed by an OLS estimation to investigate the association between a self-compassionate based empowerment and antenatal care. Empowerment was shown to be positively and significantly associated with antenatal care with significant age and education gradient. A woman's married status, her relation to the household head and joint family residence created conditions of restricted freedom in terms of her mobility, decision making and sociality. The empowerment measure showed inconsistent associations with social group affiliations and household wealth. The study provided an intellectual starting point to rethink the traditional formulations of empowerment by foregrounding its empirical measure within the relatively unexplored area of social psychology. In the process it addressed measurement gaps in the empowerment-health debate in India and beyond.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232526
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