Positive Correlation Between Women's Status and Intimate Partner Violence Suggests Violence Backlash in Mwanza, Tanzania

被引:9
|
作者
Kilgallen, Joseph A. [1 ]
Schaffnit, Susan B. [1 ]
Kumogola, Yusufu [2 ]
Galura, Anthony [1 ]
Urassa, Mark [2 ]
Lawson, David W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Anthropol, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
[2] Natl Inst Med Res, Mwanza, Tanzania
关键词
violence backlash; women's empowerment; urbanization; intimate partner violence; domestic violence; gender equality; gender norms; spousal age gap; SPOUSAL AGE GAP; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; EMPOWERMENT; FERTILITY; SUPPORT; MEN; URBANIZATION; FEMINIST; GENDER; HEALTH;
D O I
10.1177/08862605211050095
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Urbanization in low and middle-income nations is characterized by economic and demographic shifts largely understood to be beneficial to women's empowerment. These changes include increased education and wage-labor opportunities, a disruption of traditional patrilocal residence systems, and reductions in spousal age gap and fertility. However, such changes may drive a "violence backlash," with men increasing intimate partner violence (IPV) in efforts to challenge women's shifting status. To date, tests of this idea primarily relate to women's changing economic status, with less known about the demographic correlates of IPV in urbanizing settings. Addressing this, we conducted a cross-sectional study of IPV behavior and attitudes in an urbanizing community in Mwanza, northern Tanzania (n = 317). Consistent with a violence backlash, IPV was reported more often among women educated at higher levels than their husband, and women earning similar, rather than lower, wages to their husband were more likely to report that he condones IPV. These findings were independent of women's absolute education and income. Furthermore, less frequent paternal kin contact, and relatively small spousal age gaps, generally understood to boost women's empowerment, were associated with an increased risk of experiencing IPV. Less frequent paternal kin contact was also associated with an increased likelihood that a husband condones IPV. Contrary to our predictions, relatively lower fertility, generally linked to higher women's empowerment, did not predict IPV behavior and women with high, rather than low, fertility were more likely to report that their husband condones IPV. Overall, our results support the notion of a violence backlash corresponding to economic changes for women that accompany urbanization. In contrast, demographic changes associated with urbanization have more variable relationships. Drawing on these results, we suggest future research avenues for better understanding the vulnerability of women to IPV in urbanizing settings.
引用
收藏
页码:NP20331 / NP20360
页数:30
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Intimate partner violence and health status among older women
    Mouton, CP
    [J]. VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN, 2003, 9 (12) : 1465 - 1477
  • [32] Employment Status and Intimate Partner Violence Among Mexican Women
    Terrazas-Carrillo, Elizabeth C.
    McWhirter, Paula T.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE, 2015, 30 (07) : 1128 - 1152
  • [33] Health status and intimate partner violence
    Sanz-Barbero, Belen
    Rey, Lourdes
    Otero-Garcia, Laura
    [J]. GACETA SANITARIA, 2014, 28 (02) : 102 - 108
  • [34] Intimate partner violence and women's experiences of grief
    Messing, Jill Theresa
    Mohr, Rebeca
    Durfee, Alesha
    [J]. CHILD & FAMILY SOCIAL WORK, 2015, 20 (01) : 30 - 39
  • [35] Women's Autonomy and Intimate Partner Violence in Ghana
    Tenkorang, Eric Y.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, 2018, 44 (02) : 51 - 61
  • [36] Women's perceptions on intimate partner violence in Mexico
    Agoff, Carolina
    Rajsbaum, Ari
    Herrera, Cristina
    [J]. SALUD PUBLICA DE MEXICO, 2006, 48 : S307 - S314
  • [37] Women's economic empowerment and intimate partner violence
    Bergvall, Sanna
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ECONOMICS, 2024, 239
  • [38] Women's everyday resistance to intimate partner violence
    Black, Alice
    Hodgetts, Darrin
    King, Pita
    [J]. FEMINISM & PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 30 (04) : 529 - 549
  • [39] Intimate-partner violence and women's health
    Lafta, Riyadh K.
    [J]. LANCET, 2008, 371 (9619): : 1140 - 1142
  • [40] Unperceived intimate partner violence and women's health
    Sonego, Michela
    Gandarillas, Ana
    Zorrilla, Belen
    Lasheras, Luisa
    Pires, Marisa
    Anes, Ana
    Ordobas, Maria
    [J]. GACETA SANITARIA, 2013, 27 (05) : 440 - 446