Department of Public Health Sciences, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
Department of Emergency Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Dec 18;21(1):2295. doi: 10.1186/s12889-021-12221-6.
Sexual exploitation and abuse (SEA) by UN peacekeepers perpetrated against local women and girls is a concern in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). While stigma associated with sexual and gender-based violence is well documented more broadly, little is known about stigma associated with peacekeeper-perpetrated SEA.
The aim of this study was to examine how the degree of exposure to SEA affects community perceptions of a woman or girl's (1) social status (public stigma) and (2) institutional support in her community (structural stigma). Two poisson regression models with robust variance estimation were constructed utilizing community survey data of SEA experiences from eastern DRC (n = 2867) to quantify these associations. Relevant demographic variables were assessed for confounding and effect modification.
The prevalence of public and structural stigma were 62.9 and 19.3% respectively across the sample. A positive relationship was demonstrated between level of exposure of SEA and diminished social status in which women and girls experiencing moderate levels of SEA were at the greatest risk of public stigmatization after adjusting for confounding (RR: 1.94; CI: 1.66-2.26). Similarly, a positive relationship between exposure to SEA and inadequate institutional support was shown for female narrators wherein women and girls experiencing a high degree of SEA were 6.53 times as likely to receive inadequate support (RR: 6.53; CI: 3.63, 11.73). This contrasted with male narrated stories for whom there was no significant association between the SEA exposure level and institutional support.
Women/girls with high exposure levels to UN peacekeeper-perpetrated SEA are at the highest risk of public and structural stigmatization, which should be more routinely considered when conceptualizing the consequences of SEA in peacekeeping contexts. The frequent occurrence of both public and structural stigma, coupled with the varying perceptions by sex, demonstrates the need for a multi-faceted approach for stigma reduction.
联合国维和人员对刚果民主共和国(DRC)当地妇女和女孩的性剥削和虐待(SEA)是一个令人关注的问题。虽然与性暴力和基于性别的暴力相关的耻辱感在更广泛的范围内有充分的记录,但对与维和人员实施的 SEA 相关的耻辱感知之甚少。
本研究旨在探讨暴露于 SEA 的程度如何影响社区对妇女或女孩(1)社会地位(公共耻辱)和(2)社区内机构支持(结构性耻辱)的看法。利用来自刚果民主共和国东部的社区 SEA 经验调查数据(n=2867),构建了两个具有稳健方差估计的泊松回归模型,以量化这些关联。评估了相关人口统计学变量是否存在混杂和效应修饰。
在整个样本中,公共耻辱和结构性耻辱的患病率分别为 62.9%和 19.3%。暴露于 SEA 的程度与社会地位降低之间存在正相关关系,在调整混杂因素后,中度暴露于 SEA 的妇女和女孩面临最大的公共污名化风险(RR:1.94;95%CI:1.66-2.26)。同样,对于女性叙述者,SEA 暴露与机构支持不足之间也存在正相关关系,高程度暴露于 SEA 的妇女和女孩获得不足支持的可能性是其 6.53 倍(RR:6.53;95%CI:3.63,11.73)。与男性叙述的故事形成对比的是,SEA 暴露水平与机构支持之间没有显著关联。
高程度暴露于联合国维和人员实施的 SEA 的妇女/女孩面临最大的公共和结构性耻辱风险,在概念化维和背景下 SEA 的后果时,应更常规地考虑这一风险。普遍存在的公共和结构性耻辱感,加上性别差异的感知,表明需要采取多方面的方法来减少耻辱感。