University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, USA.
International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, India.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Jan;37(1-2):NP925-NP943. doi: 10.1177/0886260520918583. Epub 2020 May 13.
This study assesses associations between freedom of movement and sexual violence, both in marriage and outside of marriage, among a representative sample of adolescents in India. We analyzed data from girls aged 15 to 19 years ( = 9,593) taken from India's nationally representative National Family Health Survey 2015-2016. We defined freedom of movement using three items on whether girls could go unaccompanied to specified locations; we summated responses and categorized them as restricted, or unrestricted. We used multivariable regression to assess associations between restricted movement and nonmarital violence, and with marital sexual violence among ever-married girls. Results show that only 2% of girls reported nonmarital sexual violence, among married and unmarried girls; 6% of married girls reported marital sexual violence. Most girls (78%) reported some restriction in movement. Restricted movement was negatively associated with nonmarital sexual violence (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.52, 95% confidence interval [CI] = [0.31, 0.87], = .01) but positively associated with marital sexual violence (AOR = 3.87, 95% CI = [1.82, 8.25], < .001). Further analyses highlight that the observed association with nonmarital sexual violence was specific to urban and not rural girls. These findings reveal that approximately one in 30 adolescent girls in India has been a victim of sexual violence. Restricted movement is associated with lower risk for nonmarital sexual violence for urban adolescent girls, possibly due to lower exposure opportunity. Married girls with restricted movement have higher odds of marital sexual violence, possibly because these are both forms of control used by abusive husbands. Freedom of movement is a human right that should not place girls at greater risk for nonmarital violence or be used as a means of control by abusive spouses. Social change is needed to secure girls' safety in India.
本研究评估了印度代表性青少年样本中行动自由与婚姻内外的性暴力之间的关联。我们分析了来自印度全国代表性的 2015-2016 年国家家庭健康调查中年龄在 15 至 19 岁的女孩的数据。我们使用三个关于女孩是否可以独自前往指定地点的项目来定义行动自由;我们汇总了这些回答,并将其分类为受限或不受限。我们使用多变量回归来评估受限流动与非婚姻暴力之间的关联,以及在已婚女孩中与婚姻性暴力之间的关联。结果表明,只有 2%的女孩报告了非婚姻性暴力,包括已婚和未婚女孩;6%的已婚女孩报告了婚姻性暴力。大多数女孩(78%)报告了某种程度的行动受限。受限流动与非婚姻性暴力呈负相关(调整后的优势比 [AOR] = 0.52,95%置信区间 [CI] = [0.31, 0.87], =.01),但与婚姻性暴力呈正相关(AOR = 3.87,95% CI = [1.82, 8.25], <.001)。进一步的分析强调,与非婚姻性暴力相关的关联仅适用于城市地区,而不适用于农村地区的女孩。这些发现表明,印度大约每 30 名青少年女孩中就有 1 名遭受过性暴力。受限流动与城市青少年女孩的非婚姻性暴力风险降低相关,这可能是由于接触机会减少。行动受限的已婚女孩婚姻性暴力的几率更高,这可能是因为这两种形式的控制都是虐待丈夫使用的手段。行动自由是一项人权,不应该使女孩面临更大的非婚姻暴力风险,也不应该被虐待配偶用作控制手段。需要进行社会变革,以确保印度女孩的安全。