Department of Sociology, Stanford University, USA; Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden.
Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden.
Soc Sci Med. 2024 May;348:116777. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116777. Epub 2024 Mar 27.
Armed conflict and insecurity have been linked to deteriorations in reproductive health and rights globally. In Nigeria, armed violence has taken a significant toll on women's and girls' health and safety. However, knowledge is limited about how conflict shapes attitudes surrounding their ability to make autonomous decisions on relationships and childbearing. Drawing on a socioecological framework and terror management theory, we aimed to investigate the association between conflict, insecurity, and attitudes toward women's and girls' reproductive autonomy in Nigeria.
We conducted a cross-sectional study using data from two sources: the World Values Survey (WVS) and the Uppsala Conflict Data Program-Georeferenced Event Dataset (UCDP-GED). Nationally representative data on attitudes of 559 men and 534 women was collected by WVS in 2017-2018. Linear probability models estimated the association between attitudes toward five dimensions of women and girl's reproductive autonomy (contraception, safe abortion, marital decision-making, delayed childbearing, early marriage), respondents' perceptions of neighborhood insecurity using WVS data, and geospatial measures of conflict exposure drawn from UCDP-GED.
Exposure to armed conflict and perceived neighborhood insecurity were associated with more supportive attitudes toward access to safe abortion among both men and women. Among women, conflict exposure was associated with higher support for contraception and the perception that early marriage can provide girls with security. Conflict-affected men were more likely to support a delay in girls' childbearing.
Our findings suggest that conflict and insecurity pose a threat to, but also facilitate opportunities for, women's and girls' reproductive autonomy. Contraception, abortion, early marriage, and postponement or childbearing may be perceived as risk-aversion strategies in response to mortality threats, livelihood losses, and conflict-driven sexual violence. Our findings foreshadow changes in fertility and relationship patterns in conflict-affected Nigeria and highlight the need for health programming to ensure access to contraception and safe abortion services.
武装冲突和不安全已被证明与全球范围内生殖健康和权利的恶化有关。在尼日利亚,武装暴力对妇女和女孩的健康和安全造成了重大影响。然而,人们对冲突如何影响她们在关系和生育方面做出自主决策的能力的了解有限。本研究以社会生态学框架和死亡恐惧管理理论为基础,旨在调查冲突、不安全与尼日利亚女性和女孩生殖自主权态度之间的关联。
我们使用了两个来源的数据进行了一项横断面研究:世界价值观调查(WVS)和乌普萨拉冲突数据项目-地理参照事件数据集(UCDP-GED)。WVS 在 2017-2018 年收集了来自 559 名男性和 534 名女性的关于态度的全国代表性数据。线性概率模型估计了 WVS 数据中受访者对邻里不安全的看法与五个维度的女性和女孩生殖自主权(避孕、安全堕胎、婚姻决策、延迟生育、早婚)之间的关联,以及来自 UCDP-GED 的关于冲突暴露的地理空间测量。
武装冲突和邻里不安全的暴露与男性和女性对安全堕胎的支持态度呈正相关。在女性中,冲突暴露与对避孕的更高支持度以及认为早婚可以为女孩提供安全的观点有关。受冲突影响的男性更有可能支持推迟女孩的生育。
我们的研究结果表明,冲突和不安全既对女性和女孩的生殖自主权构成威胁,也为其提供了机会。避孕、堕胎、早婚以及推迟生育或生育可能被视为对死亡威胁、生计损失和冲突驱动的性暴力的风险规避策略。我们的研究结果预示着受冲突影响的尼日利亚的生育和关系模式的变化,并强调了需要进行健康规划以确保获得避孕和安全堕胎服务。