2018
DOI: 10.1080/00220388.2018.1469742
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Sanitation and Religion in South Asia: What Accounts for Differences across Countries?

Abstract: Exposure to open defecation has serious consequences for child mortality, health, and human capital development. South Asia has the highest rates of open defecation worldwide, and although the incidence declines as household income rises, differences across South Asian countries are not explained by differences in per capita income. The rate of open defecation in sub-national regions of Bangladesh, India and Nepal is highly correlated with the fraction of the population that identifies as Hindu, in part becaus… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(40 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
(31 reference statements)
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“…Vyas and Spears (2017) use Demographic and Health Survey data from rural Bangladesh, India, and Nepal and project that open defecation in the region would be almost eliminated if Hindus in these countries had the same sanitation behavior as non-Hindus. Geruso and Spears (forthcoming) use 2005 National Family Health Survey data and find that within India, Muslims are 25 percentage points less likely to defecate in the open than Hindus, with important consequences for differences in child survival by religion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Vyas and Spears (2017) use Demographic and Health Survey data from rural Bangladesh, India, and Nepal and project that open defecation in the region would be almost eliminated if Hindus in these countries had the same sanitation behavior as non-Hindus. Geruso and Spears (forthcoming) use 2005 National Family Health Survey data and find that within India, Muslims are 25 percentage points less likely to defecate in the open than Hindus, with important consequences for differences in child survival by religion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a correlation between religion and switching to latrines is not a hypothesis of this paper, we present descriptive results separately for Hindu and non-Hindu households. This is because prior studies of National Family Health Survey data find very large differences in latrine use between Hindus and non-Hindus (Vyas and Spears, 2017; Geruso and Spears, forthcoming). Using the IHDS data, we find that holding other variables constant, whether or not a household is Hindu is a strong predictor of latrine adoption.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet Coffey and Spears (2017) find the core reason to be caste and concepts of pollution. Drawing on comparative data and extensive fieldwork in India, they suggest the attitudes and preferences of rural populations for defecating outdoors persist because human waste is considered ritually polluting and toilets embody such pollution (see also Vyas and Spears 2018).…”
Section: Ecologies Of Waste: the Self And The Worldmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Geruso and Spears (2018) claim that the higher mortality rates observed among Indian Hindus can be accounted for by the different sanitation environments in which Hindu and Muslim children grow up. Religious beliefs and caste relations closely linked to the practice of Hinduism influence sanitation behaviour , Vyas and Spears 2018. Beliefs in purity and pollution contribute to the acceptability of widespread open defecation and the rejection of inexpensive latrines in rural India.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%