Abstract
We begin this study by considering dependency theory claims regarding the harmful influence of both debt and structural adjustment on maternal mortality. We expand upon previous research by conducting the first cross-national study to examine the impact of health and womens non-governmental organizations on maternal mortality. In doing so, we use lagged dependent variable panel regression for a sample of sixty-five poor nations. We find substantial support for dependency theory that higher levels of debt service, structural adjustment, and multinational corporate investment are associated with increased maternal mortality. Initially, we find no support for world polity theory that health and womens non-governmental organizations are significantly related to maternal mortality. However, we respecify our original models in order to test the idea that democratic nations provide a "political opportunity structure" that improves the ability of health and womens non-governmental organizations to deliver health and other social services. We find substantial support for this hypothesis. The results indicate that both health and womens non-governmental organizations are associated with decreased maternal mortality in nations with higher levels of democracy than in nations with lower levels of democracy. We conclude with a discussion of the findings, theoretical implications, methodological implications, policy implications, and potential directions for future research.
Highlights
The World Health Organization (2007) estimates that the total maternal deaths in 2005 was 536,000
We examine the effect of women’s non-governmental organizations on maternal mortality
We began this research with the goal of reevaluating dependency theory claims regarding how debt service and structural adjustment impact maternal mortality
Summary
The World Health Organization (2007) estimates that the total maternal deaths in 2005 was 536,000. This means that 400 women worldwide die per 100,000 live births. The maternal mortality ratio in poor nations is equal to 450 deaths per 100,000 live births (e.g., 533,000 total maternal deaths) compared to just 9 deaths per 100,000 live births in the rich nations (World Health Organization 2007). Structural adjustment requires nations to cut government spending to correct budgetary imbalances (Peet 2003). This too usually involves cuts in the health, education, and other welfare spending and may lead to increased maternal mortality
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