Daughter preference describes human families seeking to bear and raise daughters, rather than sons.
Daughter preference is evident in contemporary Japan [1] and Japanese-American immigrant families. [2] South Korea has also demonstrated a measurable shift from son preference to daughter preference. [3] Daughter preference appears at measurable levels in three Scandinavian countries: Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. [4] One study found that a significant contributing factor to daughter preference was the "number of wife's sisters." [5] In the matrilineal inheritance system of Malawi, daughter preference emerges if all existing children are sons. [6]
Daughter preference or son preference is sometimes expressed by higher levels of household investment in offspring of preferred gender. [7]
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Daughter preference describes human families seeking to bear and raise daughters, rather than sons.
Daughter preference is evident in contemporary Japan [1] and Japanese-American immigrant families. [2] South Korea has also demonstrated a measurable shift from son preference to daughter preference. [3] Daughter preference appears at measurable levels in three Scandinavian countries: Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. [4] One study found that a significant contributing factor to daughter preference was the "number of wife's sisters." [5] In the matrilineal inheritance system of Malawi, daughter preference emerges if all existing children are sons. [6]
Daughter preference or son preference is sometimes expressed by higher levels of household investment in offspring of preferred gender. [7]
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