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Abstract Despite significant policy and programmatic attention, Pakistan continues to struggle to reduce its fertility rate. The latest DHS (2006–2007) data show the total fertility rate (TFR) in Pakistan to be 4.1, only slightly lower than the TFR in 2001. Further, the contraceptive prevalence rate, which was already much lower than most countries with equivalent levels of fertility, has actually fallen to 29 percent according to the latest DHS. What explains the sluggish decline in fertility in Pakistan? Explanations have included barriers owing to religion, gender discrimination against women, low levels of social development, and lack of demand for family planning services. To what extent are these explanations based on perceptions about the religious and sociocultural context of the country? And to what degree do these perceptions differ from the realities of fertility decline suggested by recent evidence?
Session 152—Demography of Islamic Societies and Populations This page updated |