Bride price and dowry are two different forms of marriage payments that serve various purposes in different societies. Bride price is a form of marriage payment where the bride's group receives goods, money, or livestock to compensate for the loss of a woman's labor and fertility. It is more common in patrilineal societies and serves as a means of securing alliances and allocating women's labor power. On the other hand, dowry is a payment or gift of property that accompanies a bride upon marriage, most common in settled agricultural societies. It serves various functions, such as protecting the bride against an abusive husband, helping the couple set up their household, and improving a family's social standing. However, both practices can have negative consequences, such as harassment, deaths, suicides, and the burden on families with few or no sons. Legal reforms and debates continue to address these issues, particularly in India, where dowry has become a controversial practice.
Bride price, also known as bride wealth, is a form of marriage payment in which the bride's group receives a payment of goods, money, or livestock to compensate for the loss of a woman's labor and the children she bears. It is not a payment for women, but rather a way of valuing the labor of women, the effort involved by the bride’s family in raising the female, and the labor value of a woman's offspring. The payment secures the rights of the husband's group over the woman’s children and establishes alliances between families.
Dowry is a payment or gift of property that accompanies a bride upon marriage. It can include personal possessions, money, servants, or land. Dowries are more common in settled agricultural societies, and they may serve various functions like providing protection against an abusive husband or helping a young couple set up their household. The main difference from bride price is that dowry is a gift given to the bride or her husband, while the bride price is a payment made by the groom's family to the bride's family.
Negative consequences of dowry practices include imitation by lower castes, harassment, deaths, suicides, and the financial burden on families with few or no sons to attract a dowry. In India, dowry practices have become a controversy and a subject for legal reform due to numerous incidents where women have been harassed and murdered by their in-laws in attempts to extort richer dowries.
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