RISING GENDER INEQUALITY IN VIETNAM SINCE REUNIFICATION

Authors
Citation
D. Goodkind, RISING GENDER INEQUALITY IN VIETNAM SINCE REUNIFICATION, Pacific affairs, 68(3), 1995, pp. 342
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
International Relations","Political Science
Journal title
ISSN journal
0030851X
Volume
68
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Database
ISI
SICI code
0030-851X(1995)68:3<342:RGIIVS>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
This paper documents increases in gender inequality in Vietnam since r eunification of the country in 1975. That contention is based upon an analysis of census and other survey data, a review of secondary source materials, and fieldwork. The rise in inequality has entailed the fol lowing: declines in relative survival probabilities for female childre n, worsened marriage prospects, greater occupational segregation, and increased female representation among the elderly and impoverished. At least four factors have contributed to these changes. The first is th at wartime mobilization before 1975 had artificially inflated women's social position to an unsustainably high level. The second concerns th e demographic outcome of the war of reunification which resulted in a relative surplus of women. The third is the free market reforms of the 1980s which signaled a diminished governmental commitment to social e quity and contributed to a reemergence of patriarchal Confucian patter ns. The fourth is a set of other policy measures and historical circum stances which have enhanced preferences for bearing sons. The paper al so assesses contrary and ambiguous evidence, such as the absence of a large gender gap in education, and suggests the possibility of future improvements in gender equality.