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Survey highlights
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- The survey, Social Attitude Research, India (SARI), which was conducted through representative phone surveys in 2016 in Delhi, Mumbai, Rajasthan and UP, focusses on discrimination against Dalits and women.
- A total of 8,065 people (men and women) were interviewed for the survey.
- Conducted by the University of Texas, the Research Institute for Compassionate Economics, and Jawaharlal Nehru University
- The survey sheds light on “explicit prejudice” and reveals attitudes that have been hard to grapple with.
- On Dalits and non-Dalit Hindus and inter-marriages, the range of responses, according to the survey, vary between 60 per cent in rural Rajasthan and 40 per cent in UP, being opposed to inter-caste marriages.
- The respondents also favoured a law which would prohibit inter-caste marriages.
- India’s Special Marriage Act in 1954 made inter-caste and inter-faith marriages legal, and the idea that there would be a civil marriage recognised by the state allowing inter-caste unions, was meant to deal a death blow to the caste system (held up essentially by endogamy).
- The survey also has results on significant attitudes towards women.
- Nearly half the persons interviewed disapproved of women working outside homes, indicating that social stigma for working women is still high.
- (Female participation in the labour force at 27 per cent by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) placed India at a rank lower than 170 among 188 countries).
- On eating last at home, 60 per cent of women in rural UP say they eat at the end, and about one-third in Delhi reported the same ”” this has implications on the health of women and low body weight.
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