Assistant Professor, Faculty of Archaeology and Anthropology, Anthropology Department, Yarmouk University, Irbid, Jordan.
PhD Student, Medical Scientist Training Program, Anthropology Department, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA. Correspondence:
Sex Reprod Health Matters. 2021 Dec;29(1):2004637. doi: 10.1080/26410397.2021.2004637.
Early marriage remains a central concern among reproductive and sexual rights advocates worldwide. Mainstream researchers have often focused on the negative effects of early marriage on young women, presenting them as powerless victims of social and cultural traditions. Yet the voices and perceptions of young women remain strongly absent in many studies on early marriage. Our study addresses this knowledge gap by utilising participatory and ethnographic methodologies to better understand what early marriage means to those who have experienced it and how these emic perspectives may diverge from humanitarian paradigms. Since the war began in 2011, Syrians have become one of the largest groups of refugees worldwide, with over 5.5 million individuals seeking asylum abroad. Humanitarian organisations have called attention to high rates of early marriage within this population and its unique drivers in the specific context of displacement. We draw upon data collected between 2018 and 2020 during 90 individual interviews and 14 participatory action research meetings to explore how Syrian refugee women conceptualise the practice of early marriage and its drivers after displacement. Our findings reveal that early marriage is perceived as a practice that benefits young women and is justified in terms of its beneficial effects. Participants described early marriage as a rational solution to present-day problems, many of which they associate with the unique context of displacement. Our findings echo prior qualitative studies that illustrate the complexity of attitudes towards early marriage and the importance of understanding the specific contexts in which it is practised.
早婚仍然是全球生殖和性权利倡导者关注的核心问题。主流研究人员通常关注早婚对年轻女性的负面影响,将她们视为社会和文化传统的无力受害者。然而,在许多关于早婚的研究中,年轻女性的声音和观点仍然严重缺失。我们的研究通过利用参与式和民族志方法来解决这一知识差距,以更好地理解那些经历过早婚的人对早婚的看法,以及这些本土视角如何与人道主义范式产生分歧。自 2011 年战争开始以来,叙利亚人成为全球最大的难民群体之一,超过 550 万人在国外寻求庇护。人道主义组织已经注意到在这一人群中早婚率很高,以及在流离失所的特定背景下早婚的独特驱动因素。我们利用 2018 年至 2020 年期间在 90 次个人访谈和 14 次参与式行动研究会议中收集的数据,探讨了叙利亚难民妇女在流离失所后如何看待早婚实践及其驱动因素。我们的研究结果表明,早婚被视为一种对年轻女性有益的做法,并且可以从其有益的效果来证明其合理性。参与者将早婚描述为解决当前问题的合理方法,他们将许多问题与流离失所的独特背景联系起来。我们的研究结果与之前的定性研究相呼应,这些研究说明了对早婚态度的复杂性以及理解其实施的具体背景的重要性。