High-Risk Contexts for Violence Against Women: Using Latent Class Analysis to Understand Structural and Contextual Drivers of Intimate Partner Violence at the National Level.

Journal: Journal of interpersonal violence

Volume: 38

Issue: 1-2

Year of Publication: 2022

Affiliated Institutions:  Institute for Global Health, University College London, UK. Gender and Health Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, South Africa.

Abstract summary 

: Intimate partner violence (IPV) affects 1 in 3 women and poses a major human rights threat and public health burden, yet there is great variation in risk globally. Whilst individual risk factors are well-studied, less research has focussed on the structural and contextual drivers of IPV and how these co-occur to create contexts of high risk. : We compiled IPV drivers from freely-accessible global country-level data sources and combined gender inequality, natural disasters, conflict, colonialism, socioeconomic development and inequality, homicide and social discrimination in a latent class analysis, and identified underlying 'risk contexts' based on fit statistics and theoretical plausibility (N=5,732 country-years; 190 countries). We used multinomial regression to compare risk contexts according to: proportion of population with disability, HIV/AIDS, refugee status, and mental health disorders; proportion of men with drug use disorders; men's alcohol consumption; and population median age (N=1,654-5,725 country-years). Finally, we compared prevalence of physical and/or sexual IPV experienced by women in the past 12 months across risk contexts (N=3,175 country-years). : Three distinct risk contexts were identified: 1) non-patriarchal egalitarian, low rates of homicide; 2) patriarchal post-colonial, high rates of homicide; 3) patriarchal post-colonial conflict and disaster-affected. Compared to non-patriarchal egalitarian contexts, patriarchal post-colonial contexts had a younger age distribution and a higher prevalence of drug use disorders, but a lower prevalence of mental health disorders and a smaller refugee population. IPV risk was highest in the two patriarchal post-colonial contexts and associated with country income classification. : Whilst our findings support the importance of gender norms in shaping women's risk of experiencing IPV, they also point towards an association with a history of colonialism. To effectively address IPV for women in high prevalence contexts, structural interventions and policies are needed that address not only gender norms, but also broader structural inequalities arising from colonialism.

Authors & Co-authors:  Brown Laura J LJ Lowe Hattie H Gibbs Andrew A Smith Colette C Mannell Jenevieve J

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Abramsky T., Watts C. H., Garcia-Moreno C., Devries K., Kiss L., Ellsberg M., Jansen H. A., Heise L. (2011). What factors are associated with recent intimate partner violence? Findings from the WHO multi-country study on women’s health and domestic violence. BMC Public Health, 11(1), 109. 10.1186/1471-2458-11-109
Authors :  5
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1177/08862605221086642
SSN : 1552-6518
Study Population
Men,Women,Male
Mesh Terms
Male
Other Terms
Intimate partner violence;colonisation;ecological analysis;gender inequality;latent class analysis;risk factors;structural drivers
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
United States