Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science, University of California, San Diego, USA.
Center on Gender Equity and Health, Division of Infectious Disease and Global Public Health, School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Sep 17;24(1):2526. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-20040-8.
Gender-based violence is a tool that primarily functions to maintain gendered power hierarchies. Manifestations of gender-based violence, sexual assault and street harassment have been shown to have significant effects on mental wellbeing in the global North, however there is little research centering the experiences and consequences of gendered harassment in the Africa region.
We analyzed a cross-sectional random sample of 372 women attending a major university in Eswatini in 2017 to measure the prevalence of street harassment among female university students and assess the relationship between experiences of sexual assault, sexualized street harassment, and mental health outcomes in this population.
We found that in the previous 12 months, women reported experiencing high levels of sexual assault (20%), street harassment (90%), and depression (38%). Lifetime sexual assault, past 12 months sexual assault, and street harassment were all significantly associated with symptoms of depression. We created a structural model to test hypothesized causal pathways between street harassment, previous experiences of sexual assault, and symptoms of depression, with social support as a potential mediator. We found that a history of sexual violence significantly mediated the association between street harassment and depression, and that social support mediated a large proportion of the association between both forms of gender-based violence and depression.
Sexualized street harassment is associated with increased depressive symptomology for nearly all women, however the effects are especially pronounced for women who have previous experiences of sexual violence. Sexualized street harassment functions as a tool to maintain gendered power hierarchies by reminding women of ongoing threat of sexual violence even in public spaces. Social support and solidarity among women is a potentially important source of resiliency against the physical and mental harms of all forms of gender based violence.
性别暴力是一种主要用于维持性别权力等级制度的工具。在北欧,性别暴力、性侵犯和街头骚扰的表现已被证明对心理健康有重大影响,但关于非洲地区性别骚扰的经历和后果的研究甚少。
我们分析了 2017 年在斯威士兰一所主要大学接受调查的 372 名女性的横断面随机样本,以衡量女大学生遭受街头骚扰的流行率,并评估该人群中性侵犯经历、性化街头骚扰与心理健康结果之间的关系。
我们发现,在过去 12 个月中,女性报告经历了高程度的性侵犯(20%)、街头骚扰(90%)和抑郁(38%)。终身性侵犯、过去 12 个月的性侵犯和街头骚扰均与抑郁症状显著相关。我们创建了一个结构模型来测试街头骚扰、以前的性侵犯经历与抑郁症状之间的假设因果关系,社会支持作为潜在的中介。我们发现,性暴力史显著中介了街头骚扰与抑郁之间的关联,社会支持在性暴力和街头骚扰与抑郁之间的关联中起到了很大的中介作用。
性化的街头骚扰与几乎所有女性的抑郁症状增加有关,但对于有过性暴力经历的女性来说,这种影响更为明显。性化的街头骚扰是维持性别权力等级制度的工具,它通过在公共空间提醒女性持续存在性暴力的威胁,从而加剧了这种影响。女性之间的社会支持和团结是抵御所有形式性别暴力的身心伤害的一个潜在重要来源。