Satyen Lata, Bourke-Ibbs Madeleine, Rowland Bosco
School of Psychology, Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Front Psychol. 2024 Mar 1;15:1273401. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1273401. eCollection 2024.
Domestic violence (DV) is a serious and preventable human rights issue that disproportionately affects certain groups of people, including Indian women. Feminist theory suggests that patriarchal ideologies produce an entitlement in male perpetrators of DV; however, this has not been examined in the context of women from the Indian subcontinent. This study examined Indian women's experiences of abuse (physical, sexual, and psychological) and controlling behavior across 31 countries by examining the relationship between the patriarchal beliefs held by the women's partners and the women's experience of DV. This study uses an intersectional feminist framework to examine the variables. Data from an online questionnaire was collected from 825 Indian women aged between 18 and 77 years ( = 35.64, = 8.71) living in 31 countries across Asia (37.1%), Europe (18.3%), Oceania (23.8%), the Americas (16.1%) and Africa (3.2%) and analyzed using a hierarchical linear regression. A majority of participants (72.5%) had experienced at least one form of abuse during their relationship, and over a third (35.1%) had experienced controlling behavior. In support of the central hypotheses, after controlling for potential confounders, women whose partners showed greater endorsement of patriarchal beliefs were less likely to have access to freedom during their relationship ( = -0.38, < 0.001) and were more likely to have been abused by their partner or a member of his family ( = 0.34, < 0.001). The findings of this study highlight the need to engage with men in Indian communities through culturally-tailored intervention strategies designed to challenge the patriarchal ideologies that propagate, justify, and excuse DV.
家庭暴力(DV)是一个严重且可预防的人权问题,对包括印度女性在内的某些特定人群产生了不成比例的影响。女权主义理论表明,父权制意识形态使家庭暴力的男性施暴者产生了一种权利意识;然而,这一点尚未在印度次大陆女性的背景下得到研究。本研究通过考察女性伴侣所持的父权制信仰与女性遭受家庭暴力的经历之间的关系,调查了31个国家中印度女性遭受虐待(身体、性和心理方面)及控制行为的经历。本研究采用交叉性女权主义框架来考察这些变量。通过在线问卷收集了825名年龄在18至77岁之间(平均年龄=35.64岁,标准差=8.71)、生活在亚洲(37.1%)、欧洲(18.3%)、大洋洲(23.8%)、美洲(16.1%)和非洲(3.2%)31个国家的印度女性的数据,并使用分层线性回归进行分析。大多数参与者(72.5%)在恋爱关系中至少经历过一种形式的虐待,超过三分之一(35.1%)经历过控制行为。为支持核心假设,在控制了潜在的混杂因素后,伴侣对父权制信仰认同度更高的女性在恋爱关系中获得自由的可能性较小(β=-0.38,p<0.001),并且更有可能受到伴侣或其家庭成员的虐待(β=0.34,p<0.001)。本研究的结果凸显了有必要通过专门针对印度社区男性的、旨在挑战宣扬、为家庭暴力辩护及开脱的父权制意识形态的文化定制干预策略,来让男性参与其中。