RELIGION AND INDIA’S GROWING POPULATION: EVIDENCE FROM SOME SELECTED STATES OF INDIA / Religion and india's growing population: evidence from some selected states of India

Item

Título
RELIGION AND INDIA’S GROWING POPULATION: EVIDENCE FROM SOME SELECTED STATES OF INDIA / Religion and india's growing population: evidence from some selected states of India
Caminhos de Geografia
UNAM
UNAM
Autor
Lilia Susana Padilla y Sotelo
Arun Kumar Acharya
Assunto
agricultura
indústria
população
Abstract
We demographers rarely consider religious beliefs, rituals and traditional practices as an important intermediate fertility variable of population change. Recent data from the
Census of India, however, shows that religion is a factor behind growing population rates in India, especially within the Muslim community. The census identified that from 1981-91 to 1991-2001, the Muslim population grew from 12 per cent to 13 per cent of the country’s total, with annual growth rate rising from 34.5 per cent to 36 per cent, whilst the Hindu population declined from 81.24 per cent to 80.58 per cent of the total - with the annual growth dropping from 25.1 per cent to 20.3 per cent. So, this study attempts to see how religion is a factor determining population change in India, arguing that religion to be a direct determinant of fertility rates. For this study, data has been taken from the Census of India and National Family Heath Survey-I&II.

Key-word: Religion, fertility, contraceptive use, population growth and India
volume
6
issue
15
Date
2005
Língua
pt
issn
1678-6343
título curto
RELIGION AND INDIA’S GROWING POPULATION
Rights
Direitos autorais