השוואת שיטות
סקרו את השיטות שבחרתם זו לצד זו; שורות שבהן יש הבדל מודגשות.
| Missing Women Estimation× | Gender Inequality Index× | ניתוח לוח תמותה× | |
|---|---|---|---|
| תחום≠ | Gender Studies | Gender Studies | דמוגרפיה |
| משפחה≠ | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline | Survival analysis |
| שנת המקור≠ | 1990 | 2010 | 1984 |
| הוגה השיטה≠ | Amartya Sen | UNDP Human Development Report Office (Gaye, Klugman et al.) | Demographic/actuarial tradition; Chiang |
| סוג≠ | Demographic accounting estimate | Composite inequality index | Age-structured mortality estimator |
| מקור מכונן≠ | Sen, A. (1992). Missing women. BMJ, 304(6827), 587–588. DOI ↗ | Gaye, A., Klugman, J., Kovacevic, M., Twigg, S., & Zambrano, E. (2010). Measuring key disparities in human development: The Gender Inequality Index. Human Development Research Paper 2010/46. UNDP Human Development Report Office. link ↗ | Chiang, C. L. (1984). The Life Table and Its Applications. Robert E. Krieger Publishing. ISBN: 978-0-89874-565-2 |
| כינויים≠ | Missing Women, Excess Female Mortality Estimation, Sen Missing Women Method | GII, UNDP Gender Inequality Index | Mortality Table, Actuarial Table, Survival Table, Yaşam Tablosu |
| קשורות≠ | 2 | 4 | 3 |
| תקציר≠ | Missing women estimation quantifies the number of women and girls who are absent from a population because of gender bias in mortality and, in some settings, sex-selective abortion. Introduced by economist Amartya Sen in 1990 and 1992, the method compares the observed female population (or female deaths) with the number expected under a benchmark sex ratio that would prevail absent discrimination. The resulting deficit — famously estimated at more than 100 million worldwide — is a stark demographic measure of cumulative anti-female bias. | The Gender Inequality Index (GII) is a composite measure introduced by the UNDP in the 2010 Human Development Report to capture the loss in potential human development due to inequality between women and men. It combines three dimensions — reproductive health, empowerment, and labour-market participation — into a single index ranging from 0 (perfect equality) to 1 (complete inequality), using an association-sensitive aggregation that penalises both gaps between the sexes and inequality across dimensions. | A life table is a systematic, age-structured summary of the mortality experience of a population. It traces a hypothetical cohort of births — conventionally 100,000 — through successive age intervals, recording how many survive, how many die, and how many person-years are lived at each interval. The method was formalized in its modern probabilistic form by Chiang (1984), synthesizing centuries of actuarial and demographic practice into a rigorous statistical framework applicable to human and biological populations alike. |
| ScholarGateמערך נתונים ↗ |
|
|
|