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    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/10362/2148</link>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 20 Jun 2013 08:24:49 GMT</pubDate>
    <dc:date>2013-06-20T08:24:49Z</dc:date>
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      <title>Three essays in risky behaviors</title>
      <link>http://hdl.handle.net/10362/9687</link>
      <description>Title: Three essays in risky behaviors
Authors: Sampaio, Mafalda
Abstract: This dissertation consists of three essays on the relationship between risky behaviors and&#xD;
social environment, including the strategic construction of conversational networks to&#xD;
discuss HIV related issues, the impact of social stigma on risky behaviors, and how subjective&#xD;
expectations from parents can influence childhood obesity. Understanding where&#xD;
people seek information and how they react according to the social environment is shown&#xD;
to be important in designing effective prevention policies and programs.&#xD;
In the first chapter we investigate the formation of informal HIV conversational networks&#xD;
in rural Malawi. Using data from the Malawi Longitudional Study of Familes&#xD;
and Health (MLSFH), which contains detailed data on conversational networks, we compare&#xD;
the overlap of conversational partners between the network formed to discuss family&#xD;
planning and the one formed to discuss HIV-related issues. If networks were constructed&#xD;
randomly, there should be a high overlap in the composition of different networks for&#xD;
the same individual, as the establishment of a social link is costly. We find evidence&#xD;
that points toward a strategic behavior of individuals by concluding that people (1) vary&#xD;
the composition of their networks; (2) select partners to talk with about HIV who are&#xD;
able to provide them with new information, and (3) both men and women who perceive&#xD;
themselves to be less likely to be infected or to be less exposed to HIV risk consistently&#xD;
look for partners who can provide them with better information.&#xD;
The second paper is a joint work with Adeline Delavande and Neeraj Sood. We estimate&#xD;
the causal effect of social stigma against HIV+ persons on risky sexual behavior in rural&#xD;
Malawi by using plausibly exogenous variation in stigma arising from the introduction of&#xD;
a radio campaign seeking to reduce social stigma. The effect of stigma on risky behavior is&#xD;
a priori ambiguous. On the one hand, higher stigma can lead people to disassociate from&#xD;
the stigmatized group and hence promote risky behavior. On the other hand, stigma can&#xD;
be viewed as a social tax on being HIV+ and higher stigma may reduce risky behavior&#xD;
as a result. We find that an increase in social stigma is associated with an increase in&#xD;
risky behavior, including more partners and a higher likelihood of having extra-marital&#xD;
relations. This effect is mainly driven by the impact of stigma on men.&#xD;
The third chapter of this dissertation tackles the childhood obesity epidemic, by introducing&#xD;
two new approaches: the subjective expectations that parents have about the&#xD;
probability of future childhood obesity conditional on their choices of energy intake and&#xD;
expenditure, and the distribution of decision-power within the household. To identify&#xD;
these two new explanations for childhood obesity we designed and administered a survey&#xD;
in seven primary schools that resulted in an unique dataset covering three districts&#xD;
from Portugal and 220 respondents. Evidence points to the conclusion that parents have&#xD;
accurate expectations about the impact of consuming soft drinks and having an active&#xD;
life. Nevertheless, parents tend to believe that limiting soft drink consumption plays a&#xD;
more important role in  fighting childhood obesity, and under-value the importance of&#xD;
physical exercise. This leaves room for policy making in promoting the right balance in&#xD;
the energy intake and expenditure. Moreover, we show that parents who have a higher&#xD;
decision-power within the household and those who perceive a higher increase in the&#xD;
probability of obesity when increasing soda consumption, are the ones whose children&#xD;
drink less of such beverages.&#xD;
All in all, this dissertation contributes to the literature of risky behaviors by shedding&#xD;
some light about how the social environment shapes individuals' attitudes and perceptions&#xD;
toward risky behaviors. Not only do people deliberately seek information, they also&#xD;
tend to opt for less risky behaviors when they have a clear image of the risk they face and&#xD;
they live in a tolerant society. This suggests that working on the quality of the society's&#xD;
values and information &#xD;
flow as a whole, could trigger a reduction in risk taking behaviors&#xD;
at the individual level.
Description: A PhD Dissertation, presented as part of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy from the NOVA - School of Business and Economics</description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 2012 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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      <dc:date>2012-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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