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  1. Civil unrest and the current profile of consanguineous marriage in khyber pakhtunkhwa province, pakistan.Aftab Alam Sthanadar, Alan H. Bittles & Muhammad Zahid - 2013 - Journal of Biosocial Science 46 (5):698-701.
    Information on the current prevalence and types of consanguineous marriages in Malakand District, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Province (KPK), Pakistan, was collected from 1192 rural couples. Some 66.4% of marriages were between couples related as second cousins or closer (F≥0.0156), equivalent to a mean coefficient of inbreeding (α) of 0.0338. The data suggest that the prevalence of consanguineous unions in Malakand has been increasing during the last decade, in response to the high levels of violence across KPK.
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  • Socioeconomic, demographic and legal influences on consanguinity and kinship in northern coastal sweden 1780–1899.I. Egerbladh & A. H. Bittles - 2011 - Journal of Biosocial Science 43 (4):413-435.
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  • Consanguinity, Caste and deaf-mutism in punjab, 1921.A. H. Bittles, S. G. Sullivan & L. A. Zhivotovsky - 2004 - Journal of Biosocial Science 36 (2):221-234.
    The effects of religion, population sub-division and geography on the prevalence of deaf-mutism were investigated using information collected in the 1921 Census of Punjab. The total sample size was 9·36 million, and comprised data on thirteen Hindu castes, seventeen Muslim biraderis and two Sikh castes. A two-way analysis of variance comparing males in Hindu castes in which consanguineous marriage was prohibited, with males in Muslim biraderis which favoured first cousin marriage, indicated major differences with respect to the patterns of deaf-mutism (...)
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