MAMTA Health Institute for Mother and Child, New Delhi, India.
Division of Social Medicine and Global Health, Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Mar 23;23(1):548. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15421-4.
Preventing and responding to gender-based violence (GBV) is both a human rights imperative and a multifaceted economic issue. GBV can also act as a barrier to economic empowerment. The aim of the study was to examine the association between women's empowerment (physical mobility, decision making and economic resources) and GBV among married youth in India.
Community based cross-sectional study was conducted among married youth in the age group of 15-24 years, in two selected districts of Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, India. The data was collected from 578 youth. Pre-validated scales were used to assess women's empowerment indicators (physical mobility, decision making and economic resources). The outcomes assessed were scales on physical and sexual violence. Multivariate regression models examined associations between women's empowerment, spousal characteristics, socio-economic status and demographics.
The overall results of the study found that restricted physical mobility had a negative association with sexual violence [AOR: 0.49; CI 0.26-0.92]. Women with no decision-making power had higher odds of physical violence [AOR: 2.12; CI 0.01-4.43] and sexual violence [AOR: 1.96; CI 1.02-3.77]. Having no economic resources had a negative association with sexual violence [AOR: 0.19; CI 0.09-0.39]. Women going through spousal controlling behavior had a higher likelihood of physical [AOR: 3.79; CI 1.75-8.19] and sexual violence [AOR: 4.03; CI 2.09-7.79]. It was also found that married women from rural areas and other ethnic backgrounds had higher odds of physical violence.
There is a crucial need to work towards women's empowerment, with progressive gender roles such as greater decision-making, physical mobility and economic resources to reduce GBV. An established method that has worked in various contexts is adopting gender transformative approaches that involve men.
预防和应对基于性别的暴力(GBV)既是一项人权要务,也是一个多方面的经济问题。GBV 也可能成为经济赋权的障碍。本研究旨在探讨印度已婚青年中妇女赋权(身体活动、决策和经济资源)与 GBV 之间的关联。
在印度北方邦和拉贾斯坦邦的两个选定地区,对 15-24 岁的已婚青年进行了基于社区的横断面研究。从 578 名青年中收集数据。使用预先验证的量表评估妇女赋权指标(身体活动、决策和经济资源)。评估的结果是身体和性暴力量表。多变量回归模型研究了妇女赋权、配偶特征、社会经济地位和人口统计学因素之间的关联。
研究的总体结果发现,身体活动受限与性暴力呈负相关[优势比(AOR):0.49;置信区间(CI):0.26-0.92]。没有决策权的妇女遭受身体暴力的几率更高[AOR:2.12;CI:0.01-4.43]和性暴力[AOR:1.96;CI:1.02-3.77]。没有经济资源与性暴力呈负相关[AOR:0.19;CI:0.09-0.39]。经历配偶控制行为的妇女遭受身体暴力的可能性更高[AOR:3.79;CI:1.75-8.19]和性暴力[AOR:4.03;CI:2.09-7.79]。还发现,来自农村地区和其他族裔背景的已婚妇女遭受身体暴力的几率更高。
迫切需要努力增强妇女赋权,促进性别角色转变,赋予妇女更大的决策权、身体活动和经济资源,以减少 GBV。在各种情况下都有效的一种既定方法是采取涉及男性的性别赋权方法。