Biosocial life‐course factors associated with women's early marriage in rural India: The prospective longitudinal Pune Maternal Nutrition Study
Publication Date
2021-10-19Journal Title
American Journal of Biological Anthropology
ISSN
2692-7691
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
AO
VoR
Metadata
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Marphatia, A. A., Wells, J. C. K., Reid, A. M., & Yajnik, C. S. (2021). Biosocial life‐course factors associated with women's early marriage in rural India: The prospective longitudinal Pune Maternal Nutrition Study. American Journal of Biological Anthropology https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24408
Abstract
Abstract: Objectives: By convention, women's early marriage is considered a sociocultural decision sensitive to factors acting during adolescence such as poverty, early menarche, and less education. Few studies have examined broader risk factors in the natal household prior to marriage. We investigated whether biosocial markers of parental investment through the daughters' life‐course were associated with early marriage risk in rural India. We used an evolutionary perspective to interpret our findings. Materials and Methods: A prospective cohort recruited mothers at preconception. Children were followed from birth to age 21 years. Multivariable logistic regression models estimated odds ratios of marrying early (<19 years) associated first with wealth, age at menarche and education, and then with broader markers of maternal phenotype, natal household characteristics, and girls' growth trajectories. Models adjusted for confounders. Results: Of 305 girls, 71 (23%) had married early. Early married girls showed different patterns of growth compared to unmarried girls. Neither poverty nor early menarche predicted early marriage. Girls' non‐completion of lower secondary school predicted early marriage, explaining 19% of the variance. Independent of girls' lower schooling, nuclear household, low paternal education, shorter gestation, and girls' poor infant weight gain were associated with marrying early, explaining in combination 35% of the variance. Discussion: Early marriage reflects “future discounting,” where reduced parental investment in daughters' somatic and educational capital from early in her life favors an earlier transition to the life‐course stage when reproduction can occur. Interventions initiated in adolescence may occur too late in the life‐course to effectively delay women's marriage.
Keywords
ORIGINAL ARTICLE, ORIGINAL ARTICLES, biosocial life‐course risk factors, life‐history theory, rural India, women's early marriage, women's education and growth trajectories
Sponsorship
Economic and Social Research Council (DTC University of Cambridge 1090278)
Medical Research Council (MR/J000094/1)
University of Cambridge (Mary Euphrasia Mosley Fund, Suzy Paine Fund (Faculty of Economics), William Vaughn Lewis & Philip Lake II (Geography))
Wellcome Trust (038128/Z/93, 059609/Z/99, 079877/Z/06/Z, 098575/B/12/Z)
Identifiers
ajpa24408
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.24408
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/329662
Rights
Licence:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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