Literature DB >> 16617544

The changing nature of adolescence in the Kassena-Nankana District of northern Ghana.

B S Mensch1, D Bagah, W H Clark, F Binka.   

Abstract

This study reports the results of a primarily qualitative investigation of adolescent reproductive behavior in the Kassena-Nankana District, an isolated rural area in northern Ghana, where traditional patterns of marriage, family formation, and social organization persist. The study is based on in-depth interviews and focus-group discussions with adolescents, parents, chiefs, traditional leaders, youth leaders, and health workers, supplemented by quantitative data from the 1996 wave of a panel survey of women of reproductive age conducted by the Navrongo Health Research Centre. The social environment that adolescent boys and girls in the Kassena-Nankana District encounter and its links to reproductive behavior are described. The principal question is whether even in this remote rural area, the social environment has been altered in ways that have undermined traditional sexual and reproductive patterns. The survey data indicate a considerable increase in girls' education and the beginning of a decline in the incidence of early marriage. The qualitative data suggest that social institutions, systems, and practices such as female circumcision that previously structured the lives of adolescent boys and girls have eroded, leading to an apparent increase in premarital sexual activity.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 16617544     DOI: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.1999.00095.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stud Fam Plann        ISSN: 0039-3665


  4 in total

1.  Transactional sex amongst young people in rural northern Tanzania: an ethnography of young women's motivations and negotiation.

Authors:  Joyce Wamoyi; Daniel Wight; Mary Plummer; Gerry Hilary Mshana; David Ross
Journal:  Reprod Health       Date:  2010-04-29       Impact factor: 3.223

2.  Rationale and procedures for nesting semi-structured interviews in surveys or censuses.

Authors:  Enid Schatz
Journal:  Popul Stud (Camb)       Date:  2012-02-27

3.  Child marriage in Ghana: evidence from a multi-method study.

Authors:  Babatunde Ahonsi; Kamil Fuseini; Dela Nai; Erika Goldson; Selina Owusu; Ismail Ndifuna; Icilda Humes; Placide L Tapsoba
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2019-11-06       Impact factor: 2.809

4.  Knowledge and use of contraceptive methods amongst deaf people in Ghana.

Authors:  Wisdom K Mprah
Journal:  Afr J Disabil       Date:  2013-08-27
  4 in total

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