Astatke Rebecca Hailu, Woldegiorgis Theodros, Scott Jennifer, Prata Ndola, Harley Kim G, Deyessa Negussie, Bennett Anne, Sharma Vandana
School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, 677 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Confl Health. 2025 Jan 6;19(1):1. doi: 10.1186/s13031-024-00637-x.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is the most common form of gender-based violence affecting women and girls worldwide and is exacerbated in humanitarian settings. There is evidence that neighborhood social processes influence IPV. Perceived neighborhood social cohesion (P-NSC)-a measure of community trust, attachment, safety, and reciprocity-may be protective against women's experience of and men's perpetration of IPV and controlling behaviors.
A quantitative social network study, comprised of individual verbally-administered surveys, was conducted in Bokolmayo refugee camp in Dollo Ado, Ethiopia in 2019. In total, 302 Somali refugees (147 women and 155 men), sampled using snowball sampling, participated in the data collection. Logistic regression was used to examine P-NSC and its association with IPV to inform an IPV and HIV prevention intervention.
Low P-NSC and men's perpetration of physical IPV in the past month were strongly associated (adjusted AOR = 23.6, 95% CI: 6.2-89.9). Low P-NSC, conversely, was associated with decreased odds of women's experiences of controlling behaviors by an intimate partner in the past year (AOR = 0.1, 95% CI: 0.0-0.5). Women's experiences of other forms of IPV, including physical, sexual, and emotional IPV within the past year, were not associated with P-NSC in adjusted models; P-NSC was significantly associated with all forms of IPV in unadjusted models.
Social cohesion programs and other neighborhood approaches to improve P-NSC should be explored as potential avenues to prevent and reduce IPV, with a focus on male IPV and controlling behavior perpetration.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)是全球影响妇女和女童的最常见的基于性别的暴力形式,在人道主义环境中会加剧。有证据表明邻里社会过程会影响亲密伴侣暴力。感知到的邻里社会凝聚力(P-NSC)——一种衡量社区信任、依恋、安全和互惠的指标——可能有助于预防妇女遭受亲密伴侣暴力以及男子实施亲密伴侣暴力和控制行为。
2019年在埃塞俄比亚多洛阿迪的博科尔马约难民营进行了一项定量社会网络研究,该研究由个人口头调查组成。总共302名索马里难民(147名女性和155名男性)通过滚雪球抽样进行采样,参与了数据收集。使用逻辑回归来检验P-NSC及其与亲密伴侣暴力的关联,以为亲密伴侣暴力和艾滋病毒预防干预提供信息。
低P-NSC与男性在过去一个月实施身体暴力的亲密伴侣暴力行为密切相关(调整后的优势比[AOR]=23.6,95%置信区间[CI]:6.2-89.9)。相反,低P-NSC与女性在过去一年中遭受亲密伴侣控制行为的几率降低相关(AOR=0.1,95%CI:0.0-0.5)。在调整后的模型中,女性在过去一年中遭受的其他形式的亲密伴侣暴力,包括身体暴力、性暴力和情感暴力,与P-NSC无关;在未调整的模型中,P-NSC与所有形式的亲密伴侣暴力显著相关。
应探索社会凝聚力项目和其他改善P-NSC的邻里方法,作为预防和减少亲密伴侣暴力的潜在途径,重点是男性的亲密伴侣暴力和控制行为。