000 01727nam a22001457a 4500
999 _c527067
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100 _aEfobi, Uchenna R.
_956138
245 _aMarital “mismatch” from changes in women’s litigant rights
260 _aEconomic Development and Culture Change
300 _a72(2), Jan, 2024: p.459-491
520 _aThis paper examines the effect of a change in a legal regime to reinstate the adjudication of criminal matters to Islamic courts and documents the effect of the change on the marital matches of women. This change reduces the litigant rights of women in cases of illicit sexual behavior and extramarital relations. Combining three rounds of a nationally representative survey in Nigeria, I show that a woman affected by the legal reform is 29.2 percentage points more likely to be married to a man who earns less than she does and significantly more likely to be married to an older man. Regarding the educational attainment of the spouse, I show that an affected woman is 21.5 percentage points less likely to be married to a spouse who has higher educational attainment. Finally, a woman affected by the reform enforcement is 7.6 percentage points less likely to report that she is involved in any four intrahousehold decisions and less likely to be involved in decision-making about spending her spouse’s earnings. Some of these effects are seen only in nonmatrilineal communities, and changes in the woman’s attitude toward male dominance and outside marriage utility are other channels of effect.- Reproduced https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/721030
773 _aEconomic Development and Culture Change
906 _aWOMEN
942 _cAR