Fertility and Household Labour in Tanzania
Demography, Economy, and Society in Rufiji District, c.1870-1986
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:12th Mar '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This book is an interdisciplinary study of the way in which human reproduction interweaves with the reproduction of society and economy in coastal Tanzania. Combining demography, history, and sociology, and with a breadth of theoretical discussion and empirical detail, it offers a new methodology for the study of African fertility and the role of household demography in agrarian economies. Part I provides a political economy of changing fertility. Demographic patterns are situated within the wider social and economic context, in particular the transformation of marriage in relation to kinship and local political structures, and child-spacing dynamics rooted in the moral exonomy of gender. In Part II, the author examines the implications of demographic patterns for people's work-loads and economic fortunes at the individual and household level. Based on extensive field-work in a Tanzanian village, the analysis shows the importance of women's involvement in rice cultivation, and the fluidity of life cycles.
This empirically grounded study provides valuable insight into village-level demographics in an East African community and a highly logical critique of conventional demographic theory ... a valuable addition to the contemporary literature on Tanzania and to theories of the peasant household. * The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute *
ISBN: 9780198287544
Dimensions: 243mm x 163mm x 18mm
Weight: 511g
216 pages