Department of Statistics and Demography, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Eswatini, Kwaluseni, Manzini, Eswatini.
Department of Demography Settlement and Development, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, University of Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe.
PLoS One. 2023 Nov 13;18(11):e0294160. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0294160. eCollection 2023.
Attitudes supportive of spousal violence retards developmental efforts worldwide, and in particular in patriarchal African settings. It is important to curb this behavior by designing preventative evidence-based policies. This study examines the acceptance of intimate partner violence among women residing in Eswatini and determines whether attitudes supportive of intimate partner violence are associated with women's low socioeconomic status both at the individual- and community-level.
Cross-sectional secondary data from two Eswatini Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS) conducted in 2010 and 2014 with representative samples of 4,686 and 4,761 women, respectively were analyzed using descriptive statistics and multilevel (random effect) logistic regressions.
Overall, the prevalence of acceptance of intimate partner violence declined significantly between 2010 and 2014 in Eswatini (29.0% vs. 19.8%, p<0.001). In both surveys, socioeconomic factors associated with women's supportive attitudes toward intimate partner violence were educational level, marital structure, and community socioeconomic disadvantage. Overall, primary or lower educational attainment, single/unmarried relationships, and women living in a community with a high socioeconomic disadvantage were key factors associated with supportive attitudes toward intimate partner violence.
Secondary or higher education for individual women and a high proportion of women in the community with low socioeconomic disadvantage are important socioeconomic predictors of reducing women's supportive attitudes toward intimate partner violence. Therefore, further gains in non-supportive attitudes toward acceptance of intimate partner violence could be achieved through efforts and intervention in the education of individual women and improving women's socioeconomic status in the community.
支持配偶暴力的态度阻碍了全球,特别是在父权制非洲环境下的发展努力。通过设计基于证据的预防政策来遏制这种行为非常重要。本研究考察了斯威士兰妇女对亲密伴侣暴力的接受程度,并确定支持亲密伴侣暴力的态度是否与妇女个人和社区层面的低社会经济地位有关。
对分别于 2010 年和 2014 年进行的两次斯威士兰多指标类集调查(MICS)的横断面二次数据进行了分析,这两次调查分别使用具有代表性的 4686 名和 4761 名妇女的样本,采用描述性统计和多层次(随机效应)逻辑回归进行分析。
总体而言,2010 年至 2014 年,斯威士兰支持亲密伴侣暴力的接受度明显下降(29.0%对 19.8%,p<0.001)。在这两项调查中,与妇女对亲密伴侣暴力的支持态度相关的社会经济因素是教育程度、婚姻结构和社区社会经济劣势。总的来说,接受小学或以下教育、单身/未婚关系以及生活在社会经济劣势高的社区的妇女是支持亲密伴侣暴力态度的关键因素。
妇女个人接受中等或高等教育以及社区中社会经济地位低的妇女比例高,是降低妇女对亲密伴侣暴力支持态度的重要社会经济预测因素。因此,通过对妇女个人教育的努力和干预以及改善社区中妇女的社会经济地位,可以进一步提高对接受亲密伴侣暴力的非支持态度。