I am a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at the UCL Department of Economics. My research interests are in Applied Microeconomics, in particular Development Economics, Economics of the Family and Labour Economics. My job market paper exploits the introduction of Sharia laws in northern Nigeria to investigate the effect of Islamic law on parental behaviour towards children and on child welfare. In other current research projects, I analyse the effects of expected dowry payments on fertility choices and the unintended consequences of conditional cash transfer programmes on sex ratios at birth.
- Development economics
- Economics of the family
- Labour economics
Abstract
Islamic law lays down detailed rules regulating the upbringing of children. This study examines the effect of these rules on parental behaviour by exploiting a unique natural experiment: the introduction of Sharia law in northern Nigeria. Both triple differences and spatial regression discontinuity estimates show that the Sharia has had a positive effect on fertility rates and the duration of breastfeeding. Empirical evidence further suggests that the Sharia has impacted on parental behaviour by increasing the economic returns to sons and by raising the value of conspicuous adherence to Islamic laws and customs. Moreover, duration analysis estimates show that the Sharia has increased the survival rate of newly born children. By contrast, it has had a negative impact on the survival rate of children aged 1 to 4. This latter effect is particularly pronounced for girls.
- Prof Christian Dustmann (UCL)
- Prof Uta Schoenberg (UCL)
- Prof Wiji Arulampalam (Warwick)
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