Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T01:52:46.588Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Sex Ratios and Sex Sequences of Births in India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Kanti Pakrasi
Affiliation:
Research and Training School, Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta, India
Ajit Halder
Affiliation:
Research and Training School, Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta, India

Extract

101,220 births in urban areas and 147,331 in rural areas in India, recorded by interview from a 10% sample of households in 3888 villages and 2357 urban blocks, have been analysed. The overall sex ratio was similar to that found in Europe; the only obvious effect of birth order was an apparent high masculinity of first births in both urban and rural areas (probably artifactual); the distribution of the sexes in families in both areas differed somewhat from the binomial expectation; and there was no association between the sexes of pairs of children from adjacent births, but some in the case of pairs separated by one other birth in urban areas or by two other births in rural areas.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1971

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ajit das, Gupta et al. (1955) Couple Fertility (NSS Report No. 7), pp. 6268. Government of India Publication.Google Scholar
Banerjee, P. (1969) Birth weight of the Bengali newborn: effect of the economic position of the mother. Ann. hum. Genet. 33, 99.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Census of India (1901) Report, 1 (i), 107.Google Scholar
Census of India (1921) Report, 1 (i), 114.Google Scholar
Census of India (1931) Report, 1 (i), 42.Google Scholar
Chandrasekhar, S. (1946) India's Population: Fact and Policy. John Day & Co., New York.Google Scholar
Ciocco, A. (1938) Variation in the sex ratio at birth in the United States. Hum. Biol. 10, 36.Google Scholar
Davis, K. (1951) The Population of India and Pakistan. Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Desai, P.B. (1967) Variation in population sex ratios in India, 1901–61. In: Patterns of Population Change in India, 1951–61. Edited by Ashish, Bose. Allied Publishers.Google Scholar
Edwards, A.W.F. & Fraccaro, M. (1960) Distribution and sequences of sexes in a selected sample of Swedish families. Ann. hum. Genet. 24, 245.Google Scholar
Gini, C. (1951) Combination and sequences of sexes in human families and mammal litters. Acta genet. Statist. med. 2, 220.Google ScholarPubMed
Halder, A.K. & Bhattacharya, N. (1970) Fertility and sex sequence of children of Indian couples. Etudes Demographiques Recherches Economiques de Louvain, No. 4. University of Louvain.Google Scholar
Jastrzebski, S. de (1919) The sex ratio at birth. Eugen. Rev. 2, 6.Google Scholar
Lazos, S. (1959) Az ujszulottek nemi aranya (Sex ratio at birth). Demografia, 2, 520.Google Scholar
Meyers, J.S. (1949) Same-sexed families. J. Hered. 40, 268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
National Sample Survey (1967) Report No. 121, 334. Government of India Publication.Google Scholar
National Sample Survey (1967) Tables with Notes on Couple Fertility, 1, 345. Indian Statistical Institute, Calcutta.Google Scholar
Parkes, A.S. (1963) The sex ratio in human populations. In: Man and His Future. Edited by Wolstenholme, G.W.Churchill, London.Google Scholar
Pollard, G.N. (1969) Factors influencing the sex ratio at birth in Australia. J. biosoc. Sci. 1, 125.Google Scholar
Rife, D.C. & Snyder, L.H. (1937) The distribution of sex ratios within families in an Ohio city. Hum. Biol. 9, 99.Google Scholar
Russell, W.T. (1936) Statistical study of the sex ratio at birth. J. Hyg. 36, 381.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Slater, E. (1944) A demographic study of the psychopathic population. Ann. Eugen. 12, 2.Google Scholar
Stern, C. (1960) Principles of Human Genetics, 2nd edn. Freeman, San Francisco.Google Scholar
Strandskov, H.H. & Roth, J.A. (1949). A comparison of rural and urban birth sex ratios for the total, white and coloured US populations. Am. J. phys. Anthrop. 7, 91.Google Scholar
Visaria, M.P. (1967) The sex ratio of the population of India and Pakistan and regional variations during 1901–61. In: Patterns of Population Change in India, 1951–61. Edited by Ashish, Bose.Allied Publishers.Google Scholar