LSHTM, London, UK.
Institute for Medical Information Processing, Biometry, and Epidemiology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Munich, Germany.
BMC Womens Health. 2021 Jun 12;21(1):241. doi: 10.1186/s12905-021-01363-9.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) has been recognized as a defining human rights, development and public health issue of our time. Economic empowerment is one of the most promising interventions to reduce IPV in sub-Saharan Africa, yet the evidence around economic factors that are key to ensure a reduction in IPV are still mixed. Furthermore, there is a lack of clarity on what kinds of economic empowerment works for which population group. This paper seeks a more nuanced understanding, by investigating whether the associations between indicators of economic empowerment and physical and/or sexual IPV are similar between the general population of women and among urban versus rural and young, or middle aged women versus older women.
Using couples data from 25 DHS surveys across 15 countries (n = 70,993 women and men aged 15 and above at time of survey), we analyse how household wealth, men's and women's education and employment status, decision making on women's income, differences in education and employment of women and their partners and women's cash income are associated with physical and/or sexual IPV. We also provide sub-analyses for both urban and rural areas and for women aged, 15 to 24 25 to 34 and 35 to 49.
Across all surveys, 20% of women reported physical and/or sexual IPV in the last 12 months. On the one hand, our findings reinforced certain well-established patterns between women's economic empowerment and IPV, with women's and men's higher levels of education and increased household wealth associated with a decrease in IPV, and women's employment, especially if only the woman worked, and women earning more than her partner associated with an increase in IPV. Most patterns did not differ across urban and rural settings and age groups, but notable differences emerged regarding household wealth, women's and men's employment in the last 12 months and relative employment and education.
Factors relating to women's economic empowerment are vital in understanding and addressing IPV. Our analysis indicate however that future interventions need to consider the differing needs of urban and rural areas as well as be targeted to different age groups.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)已被公认为是当代人权、发展和公共卫生的一个决定性问题。经济赋权是减少撒哈拉以南非洲地区 IPV 的最有前途的干预措施之一,但关于确保减少 IPV 的关键经济因素的证据仍然存在分歧。此外,对于哪种经济赋权形式适用于哪个人群群体,还缺乏明确性。本文通过调查经济赋权指标与身体和/或性 IPV 之间的关联在女性总人口以及城市与农村以及年轻或中年女性与老年女性之间是否相似,试图对此有更细致的了解。
利用来自 15 个国家的 25 项 DHS 调查中的夫妇数据(n=70993 名 15 岁及以上的男女),我们分析家庭财富、男女教育和就业状况、妇女收入决策、妇女及其伴侣教育和就业差异以及妇女现金收入如何与身体和/或性 IPV 相关。我们还提供了城乡地区以及年龄在 15 至 24 岁、25 至 34 岁和 35 至 49 岁的女性的亚分析。
在所有调查中,20%的女性报告在过去 12 个月中遭受过身体和/或性 IPV。一方面,我们的研究结果强化了妇女经济赋权与 IPV 之间某些既定模式,妇女和男子的受教育程度较高,家庭财富增加与 IPV 减少有关,而妇女就业,特别是如果只有妇女就业,以及妇女收入高于其伴侣与 IPV 增加有关。大多数模式在城乡和年龄组之间没有差异,但在家庭财富、妇女和男子在过去 12 个月中的就业以及相对就业和教育方面存在显著差异。
与妇女经济赋权相关的因素对于理解和解决 IPV 至关重要。然而,我们的分析表明,未来的干预措施需要考虑到城乡地区的不同需求,并针对不同的年龄组。