Preventing son preference and undervaluing of girls in Eastern Europe an Central Asia

 Preventing son preference and undervaluing of girls in Eastern Europe an Central Asia (PDF | 16 pagina's | 1,8 MB)

Gender-biased sex selection has emerged since the early 1990s as a widespread practice in parts of the Eastern Europe and Central Asia (EECA) region. The preference of many parents for sons, combined with the use of modern reproductive technologies and declining fertility, has skewed the normal ratio between male and female births in several countries, mostly in the South Caucasus and parts of South-Eastern Europe.