There is a
tension in the South Caucasus between high rates of abortion (and sex-selective
abortion) and overwhelmingly conservative attitudes against it. Abortion rates in
Georgia and Armenia are higher than the EU average and the rate in Azerbaijan
is below. A 2010 article by the Economist placed Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia 2nd,
3rd and 4th, respectively, on a list of countries
worldwide where the numbers of girls are off balance at birth - China ranks
first. This blog aims to explore attitudes towards abortion and gender in the
South Caucasus, and shows that while there are widespread conservative
attitudes against abortion, it remains frequently carried out.
Data from 2010 World Health
Organization (WHO) report on abortion rates show that there are more
abortions among women of reproductive age (15-44 years) in Georgia and Armenia
relative to the average in the European Union (See chart below). The abortion
rates in the South Caucasus region also vary considerably; the number of
abortions per 1,000 live births is lower than the EU average (222) in
Azerbaijan (162), whereas it stands at 274 in Armenia, and 408 in Georgia.
The high
rate of abortion in the South Caucasus is also linked to sex-selective
abortion, whereby pregnancies are terminated if the
fetus is female. Male
newborns outnumber females by more than 10% in the South Caucasus. For every
100 girls, there are 112 boys in
Armenia, 114 boys in Azerbaijan, and 111 in Georgia according to the 2011 CIA World
Factbook. Additionally, in 2011 the European Commission declared that “Prenatal sex selection is to be condemned as a
phenomenon which finds its roots in a culture of gender inequality”. Thus, the
sex-selective abortion problem in the South Caucasus may be a consequence of a
greater cultural issue. Another considerable factor is the lower number of
children that families in the South Caucasus have over time. For example, in
the mid-sixties each family had 3 children on average in Georgia, 4 in
Armenia and 5 in Azerbaijan, whereas, according to the 2012 World Factbook, the average number of children per family is now 1.46 in
Georgia, 1.38 in Armenia, and 1.92 in Azerbaijan. With a choice of 1 to 2
children, many families in the South Caucasus prefer to have a boy instead.
Data from
the 2010 CB also shows that people of both genders are more likely to say they
prefer a son. Men in Georgia and Armenia indicate the greatest preference to
have a male child (approximately 60%), whereas one third (33%) of Azerbaijani
men agree. CB data also indicates that the gender of a child matters least in
Azerbaijan and most in Armenia, whereas in all three countries men are more
likely than women to say that they want a boy.
Yet, despite
the high rate of abortions, and specifically sex-selective abortions, the CB
2011 shows that attitudes towards abortion in these countries remain very
conservative. Well over half of the Georgian (76%) and Armenian (61%)
populations believe that abortion can “never be justified” (This question was
measured on a 1-5 scale where 1 =”never justified”, 5=”always justified”. The
question was not asked in Azerbaijan).
Moreover, the
high rates of abortion are puzzling in these countries where the majority of
the population says religion is important in daily life (92% in Georgia, 92% in
Armenia and 80% in Azerbaijan according to the CB 2012), and where trusted
religious authoritative bodies (i.e. Georgian Orthodox Church in Georgia,
Armenian Apostolic Church in Armenia, and both Shia and Sunni Islamic
Organizations in Azerbaijan) consistently advocate against abortion.
How can we explain these conservative attitudes against abortion along
with the high rate of abortion in the South Caucasus? Is it a familiarity with
abortion as a method of contraception from the Soviet Union, the availability
of sex-selective technology, cultural attitudes, or
something else? What do you think?
3 comments:
Very Interesting!
Please provide source of information on the importance of religion in daily life. It is my understanding that religion has little meaning in daily life in Azerbaijan, especially after soviet system of 70 years when religious beliefs were suppressed.
Dear Margaret, so far results from 2012 about the importance of religion in the daily life of the people in the South Caucasus are not accessible on our ODA database. However, you can check Caucasus Barometer results for 2011 (http://www.crrc.ge/oda/?dataset=16&page=codebook): just choose a country from the database list and then find "RELIMP: How important is religion in your daily life?" question in the variable's section.
Besides, a new blog post about the different concepts of God in the region is upcoming, I will keep you updated!
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