Gender and Health Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Pretoria, South Africa.
School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
BMC Public Health. 2020 May 13;20(1):682. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-08825-z.
In order to reduce women's exposure to violence and develop culturally appropriate interventions, it is important to gain an understanding of how men who use violence rationalize it. The present study sought to explore the perspectives of men who had used violence on their female partners, specifically their views on intimate partner violence (IPV), gender norms, manhood, their gender attitudes and to understand how these may drive male perpetrated IPV against women in the Central Region of Ghana.
This was a qualitative study involving purposively sampled adult men who had participated in a household-based survey in selected districts in the Central Region of Ghana and who had self-reported perpetration of IPV in the past 12 months. In-depth interviews were conducted with 17 men.
Data revealed how a range of social, cultural, and religious factors ̶ stemming from patriarchy ̶ combined to inform the construction of a traditional masculinity. These factors included the notion that decision-making in the home is a man's prerogative, there should be rigid and distinct gender roles, men's perceptions of owning female partners and having the right to have sex with them whenever they desire, and the notion that wife beating is legitimate discipline. Findings suggest that it was through performing, or aspiring to achieve, this form of masculinity that men used varying forms of violence against their female partners. Moreover, data show that the men's use of violence was a tactic for controlling women and emphasizing their authority and power over them.
Developers of interventions to prevent IPV need to recognize that there is a coherent configuration of aspirations, social norms and behaviours that is drawn on by some men to justify their use of IPV. Understanding the perspectives of men who have perpetrated IPV against women and their motivations for perpetration is essential for interventions to prevent IPV. This is discussed as drawing authority from 'tradition' and so engaging traditional and religious leaders, as well as men and women throughout the community, in activities to challenge this is likely to be particularly fruitful.
为了减少妇女遭受暴力的风险并开发文化上适宜的干预措施,了解使用暴力的男性如何为其行为合理化至关重要。本研究旨在探讨曾对其女性伴侣实施暴力的男性的观点,特别是他们对亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)、性别规范、男子气概、性别态度的看法,并理解这些观点如何助长加纳中部地区男性对女性实施的 IPV。
这是一项定性研究,涉及在加纳中部地区选定地区参与家庭为基础的调查并自我报告过去 12 个月内实施 IPV 的成年男性。对 17 名男性进行了深入访谈。
数据揭示了一系列社会、文化和宗教因素——源于父权制——如何共同影响传统男子气概的构建。这些因素包括家庭决策是男性的特权、存在严格而明确的性别角色、男性对拥有女性伴侣和随时与她们发生性关系的看法、以及打老婆是合法管教的观念。研究结果表明,正是通过表现或渴望实现这种男子气概,男性对女性伴侣使用了不同形式的暴力。此外,数据表明,男性使用暴力是控制女性并强调其对女性的权威和权力的一种策略。
预防 IPV 的干预措施的制定者需要认识到,一些男性利用一系列连贯的愿望、社会规范和行为来为他们使用 IPV 辩护。了解对女性实施 IPV 的男性的观点及其实施暴力的动机对于预防 IPV 的干预措施至关重要。这被认为是从“传统”中汲取权威,因此,让传统和宗教领袖以及整个社区的男女参与挑战这一传统的活动可能特别有成效。