Evens Emily, Lanham Michele, Santi Karin, Cooke Juana, Ridgeway Kathleen, Morales Giuliana, Parker Caleb, Brennan Claire, de Bruin Marjan, Desrosiers Pavel Chladni, Diaz Xenia, Drago Marta, McLean Roger, Mendizabal Modesto, Davis Dirk, Hershow Rebecca B, Dayton Robyn
FHI 360, 359 Blackwell Street, Durham, NC, 27707, USA.
United Nations Development Programme, Panama City, Panama.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2019 Mar 5;19(1):9. doi: 10.1186/s12914-019-0187-5.
Female sex workers, MSM, and transgender women-collectively referred to as key populations (KPs)-are disproportionately affected by gender-based violence (GBV) and HIV, yet little is known about the violence they face, its gender-based origins, and responses to GBV. The purpose of this study was to understand the nature and consequences of GBV experienced, to inform HIV policies and programming and to help protect KPs' human rights.
Using a participatory approach, FSWs, MSM, and transgender women in Barbados, El Salvador, Trinidad and Tobago, and Haiti conducted 278 structured interviews with peers to understand their experiences of and responses to GBV. Responses to open-ended questions were coded in NVivo and analyzed using an applied thematic analysis.
Nearly all participants experienced some form of GBV. Emotional and economic GBV were the most commonly reported but approximately three-quarters of participants reported sexual and physical GBV and other human rights violations. The most common settings for GBV were at home, locations where sex work took place such as brothels, bars and on the street; public spaces such as parks, streets and public transport, health care centers, police stations and-for transgender women and MSM-religious settings and schools. The most common perpetrators of violence included: family, friends, peers and neighbors, strangers, intimate partners, sex work clients and other sex workers, health care workers, police, religious leaders and teachers. Consequences included emotional, physical, and sexual trauma; lack of access to legal, health, and other social services; and loss of income, employment, housing, and educational opportunities. Though many participants disclosed experiences of GBV to friends, colleagues and family, they rarely sought services following violence. Furthermore, less than a quarter of participants believed that GBV put them at risk of HIV.
Our study found that across the four study countries, FSWs, MSM, and transgender women experienced GBV from state and non-state actors throughout their lives, and much of this violence was directly connected to rigid and harmful gender norms. Through coordinated interventions that address both HIV and GBV, this region has the opportunity to reduce the national burden of HIV while also promoting key populations' human rights.
女性性工作者、男男性行为者和跨性别女性——统称为重点人群(KPs)——遭受基于性别的暴力(GBV)和感染艾滋病毒的影响尤为严重,但对于她们所面临的暴力、其基于性别的根源以及对GBV的应对措施,人们却知之甚少。本研究的目的是了解所经历的GBV的性质和后果,为艾滋病毒政策和规划提供信息,并帮助保护重点人群的人权。
采用参与式方法,巴巴多斯、萨尔瓦多、特立尼达和多巴哥以及海地的女性性工作者、男男性行为者和跨性别女性与同伴进行了278次结构化访谈,以了解他们对GBV的经历和应对措施。对开放式问题的回答在NVivo中进行编码,并使用应用主题分析进行分析。
几乎所有参与者都经历过某种形式的GBV。情感和经济方面的GBV是最常被报告的,但约四分之三的参与者报告了性和身体方面的GBV以及其他侵犯人权行为。GBV最常见的发生场所包括家中、性工作场所,如妓院、酒吧和街头;公园、街道和公共交通等公共场所、医疗保健中心、警察局,以及——对于跨性别女性和男男性行为者来说——宗教场所和学校。最常见的暴力实施者包括:家人、朋友、同伴和邻居、陌生人、亲密伴侣、性工作客户和其他性工作者、医护人员、警察、宗教领袖和教师。后果包括情感、身体和性方面的创伤;无法获得法律、医疗和其他社会服务;以及收入、就业、住房和教育机会的丧失。尽管许多参与者向朋友、同事和家人透露了GBV经历,但暴力发生后他们很少寻求服务。此外,不到四分之一的参与者认为GBV使他们面临感染艾滋病毒的风险。
我们的研究发现,在这四个研究国家中,女性性工作者、男男性行为者和跨性别女性在其一生中都遭受了来自国家和非国家行为者的GBV,而且这种暴力大多与僵化和有害的性别规范直接相关。通过针对艾滋病毒和GBV的协调干预措施,该地区有机会减轻国家的艾滋病毒负担,同时促进重点人群的人权。