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Abstract

Education and the timing of sexual initiation and marriage in rural Malawi: A longitudinal analysis of the effect of attendance, attainment, and repetition 
Paper presented at the Population Association of America Annual Meeting, Detroit, 2 May
Soler-Hampejsek,Erica; Mensch,Barbara S.; Hewett,Paul C.
Publication date: 2009



While early marriage has declined in sub-Saharan Africa in recent years, premarital sex has increased. Women's level of education has been documented to be strongly and positively associated with age at first marriage in the region. Moreover, girls enrolled in school are less likely to engage in premarital sex than those out of school, although this appears not to be the case for boys. In this study we examine the effect of education-including grade attainment, school dropout, and math and literacy skills-on the timing of sexual initiation and marriage using a longitudinal adolescent survey conducted in rural Malawi. The analysis will estimate multiple decrement tables for sexual initiation before and within marriage and will use hazard models to explore the effects of education on age at first sex for males and females, and marriage for females. Finally, a joint model to account for potential endogeneity will be estimated.




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