Girl Child in India

In stock

Free & Quick Delivery Worldwide

The girl child is perceived as a burden to be passed on to another family. Her contribution in the household economy is unacknowledged. The adverse attitude towards the girl child signals the catastrophy of serious demographic imbalance and degeneration of socio-economic conditions. Unfortunately, the rejection of the unwanted girl begins even before her birth. Prenatal sex determination tests followed by quick abortions eliminate thousand of female foetuses before they can become daughters. Those unfortunate girls who manage to survive till birth and beyond, find the dice heavily loaded against them. In a male dominated society, girls are denied equal access to food, health care, education, employment and even simple human dignity. Here sacrifice and dedicated services ensure the well-being of the family, but in return, she receives neglected childhood devoid of proper education and health care. The present work is concerned with problems of girl child, their exploitation, discrimination, disparity in education and health sector, sex determination tests, sex-ratio and their serious implications in India in the global frame. Both primary and secondary sources of data have been accumulated and used for analysis and interpretation in making the study more interesting and useful. In fact, the findings and observations of the study will be certainly useful to the policy makers, researchers, demographers, social and women activists and even to the general readers.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR S.N. Tripathy

S.N. Tripathy is one of the products of the intensive research effort which brought in the Green Revolution. with a Master's degree in Agronomy and a doctorate in Biotechnology, he has been actively associated with research institutes in the area of rice and wheat research. He has also served with the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) as senior scientist.

reviews

0 in total

There are no reviews yet.

Bibliographic information

Title
Girl Child in India
Author
Edition
1st Ed.
Publisher
ISBN
8171416233
Length
124p., Tables; Figs.
Subjects