Mandatory Schooling of Girls Improved Their Children's Health: Evidence from Turkey's 1997 Education Reform

This study examines the impact of mandatory maternal education on child health in Turkey, where a non‐trivial fraction of families restricted their daughters’ schooling due to social and cultural barriers. The analysis employs two large data sets and exploits a quasi‐experiment involving an educatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of policy analysis and management 2022-06, Vol.41 (3), p.824-858
Hauptverfasser: Dursun, Bahadır, Cesur, Resul, Kelly, Inas R.
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container_title Journal of policy analysis and management
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creator Dursun, Bahadır
Cesur, Resul
Kelly, Inas R.
description This study examines the impact of mandatory maternal education on child health in Turkey, where a non‐trivial fraction of families restricted their daughters’ schooling due to social and cultural barriers. The analysis employs two large data sets and exploits a quasi‐experiment involving an education reform that increased compulsory schooling. Results show that an increase in mother's schooling improves child health at birth (as measured by factors such as low birth weight and premature birth) and lowers child mortality. The current study on the intergenerational benefits of compulsory schooling arguably provides the strongest evidence supporting the argument that mandatory female education has substantial nonpecuniary benefits in terms of the health of the offspring in societies where female education is stigmatized. The implications of this research extend beyond girls’ schooling and suggest that compulsory human capital investments in children can correct market failures when families underinvest in their children because of social or cultural barriers.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; PAIS Index; Business Source Complete
subjects Barriers
Body Weight
Capital investments
Child Health
Child mortality
Childbirth & labor
Children
Children & youth
Childrens health
Compulsory
Compulsory Education
Daughters
Education reform
Educational Benefits
Educational Change
Families & family life
Foreign Countries
Girls
Health education
Health status
Human Capital
Infant Mortality
Investment
Low birth weight
Maternal characteristics
Mothers
Premature birth
Stigma
Women's education
Womens Education
title Mandatory Schooling of Girls Improved Their Children's Health: Evidence from Turkey's 1997 Education Reform
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