Perrin Nancy, Marsh Mendy, Clough Amber, Desgroppes Amelie, Yope Phanuel Clement, Abdi Ali, Kaburu Francesco, Heitmann Silje, Yamashina Masumi, Ross Brendan, Read-Hamilton Sophie, Turner Rachael, Heise Lori, Glass Nancy
Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, 525 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205 USA.
2UNICEF, New York, NY USA.
Confl Health. 2019 Mar 8;13:6. doi: 10.1186/s13031-019-0189-x. eCollection 2019.
Gender-based violence (GBV) primary prevention programs seek to facilitate change by addressing the underlying causes and drivers of violence against women and girls at a population level. Social norms are contextually and socially derived collective expectations of appropriate behaviors. Harmful social norms that sustain GBV include women's sexual purity, protecting family honor over women's safety, and men's authority to discipline women and children. To evaluate the impact of GBV prevention programs, our team sought to develop a brief, valid, and reliable measure to examine change over time in harmful social norms and personal beliefs that maintain and tolerate sexual violence and other forms of GBV against women and girls in low resource and complex humanitarian settings.
The development and testing of the scale was conducted in two phases: 1) formative phase of qualitative inquiry to identify social norms and personal beliefs that sustain and justify GBV perpetration against women and girls; and 2) testing phase using quantitative methods to conduct a psychometric evaluation of the new scale in targeted areas of Somalia and South Sudan.
The was administered to 602 randomly selected men ( = 301) and women (N = 301) community members age 15 years and older across Mogadishu, Somalia and Yei and Warrup, South Sudan. The psychometric properties of the 30-item scale are strong. Each of the three subscales, "Response to Sexual Violence," "Protecting Family Honor," and "Husband's Right to Use Violence" within the two domains, personal beliefs and injunctive social norms, illustrate good factor structure, acceptable internal consistency, reliability, and are supported by the significance of the hypothesized group differences.
We encourage and recommend that researchers and practitioners apply the in different humanitarian and global LMIC settings and collect parallel data on a range of GBV outcomes. This will allow us to further validate the scale by triangulating its findings with GBV experiences and perpetration and assess its generalizability across diverse settings.
基于性别的暴力(GBV)初级预防项目旨在通过在人群层面解决暴力侵害妇女和女童行为的根本原因及驱动因素来促进变革。社会规范是情境性和社会性衍生的对适当行为的集体期望。维持基于性别的暴力的有害社会规范包括女性的性纯洁、将保护家庭荣誉置于女性安全之上以及男性管教妇女和儿童的权力。为评估基于性别的暴力预防项目的影响,我们的团队试图开发一种简短、有效且可靠的测量方法,以检验在资源匮乏和复杂的人道主义环境中,维持和容忍针对妇女和女童的性暴力及其他形式基于性别的暴力的有害社会规范和个人信念随时间的变化。
该量表的开发和测试分两个阶段进行:1)定性探究的形成阶段,以确定维持和为暴力侵害妇女和女童行为辩解的社会规范和个人信念;2)测试阶段,使用定量方法对索马里和南苏丹目标地区的新量表进行心理测量评估。
该量表被施用于索马里摩加迪沙、南苏丹耶伊和瓦鲁普随机抽取的602名15岁及以上的男性(n = 301)和女性(N = 301)社区成员。这个包含30个条目的量表的心理测量特性很强。在个人信念和指令性社会规范这两个领域内,三个子量表“对性暴力的反应”“保护家庭荣誉”和“丈夫使用暴力的权利”中的每一个都呈现出良好的因子结构、可接受的内部一致性、可靠性,并得到假设的群体差异显著性的支持。
我们鼓励并建议研究人员和从业者在不同的人道主义和全球中低收入国家环境中应用该量表,并收集一系列基于性别的暴力结果的平行数据。这将使我们能够通过将其结果与基于性别的暴力经历和行为进行三角互证来进一步验证该量表,并评估其在不同环境中的普遍性。