The Intersections of Women’s Economic and Reproductive Empowerment
This article examines the connections between women's reproductive health, care responsibilities, and the quality of work. The research suggests that the economic empowerment of women, manifest in their choice of where and when to work, and under the terms and conditions of that work, is intimately linked to reproductive empowerment and reproductive outcomes. Simplistic discourse in development policy about educating girls and getting women into the labor force will fall far short of their goals without attention to their reproductive health and rights. The analysis highlights the data limitations inherent in existing surveys that frustrate a more nuanced inquiry into employment and fertility outcomes. Analysts and statistical agencies responsible for household and labor force survey design could certainly apply some of the information from questions that elicit retrospective histories of contraception and fertility for similar approaches to employment history, job quality, and labor market intermittency