Going to school in Purdah: female schooling, mobility norms and madrasas in Bangladesh
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Date
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BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
Authors
Citation
Asadullah, M. N., & Wahhaj, Z. (2013). Going to school in Purdah: Female schooling, mobility norms and madrasas in Bangladesh. BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED).
Abstract
This paper looks at the determinants of secondary school attendance in Bangladesh
with a focus on the interaction between community gender norms and relative supply
of madrasas (i.e. Islamic schools). We present a theoretical framework where the
probability of children’s school participation varies with respect to a non-economic
factor – how the community observes social norms regarding female mobility –
conditional upon the types of available schools. Household data from the
Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey (BDHS) is combined with community
information on the availability of non-religious secondary schools and madrasas to
test our theoretical predictions. We find that in communities which are more
'progressive', in the sense that women have a relatively high level of mobility, the
effect of availability of non-religious school on attendance does not vary by gender.
However, in the more ‘conservative communities’, female schooling is more sensitive
to the availability of madrasas.
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Research report