4.3 Article

Troubling Trade-offs Between Women's Work and Intimate Partner Violence: Evidence From 19 Developing Countries

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE
Volume 37, Issue 17-18, Pages NP16180-NP16205

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/08862605211021961

Keywords

intimate partner violence; physical violence; emotional violence; sexual violence; women's employment; developing countries

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The study found that in South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East, working women were more likely to experience different types of intimate partner violence compared to stay-at-home women. Different types of jobs had different effects on women's risk of violence, with women in blue-collar and white-collar jobs facing an increased risk of less severe physical violence but reduced risk of sexual violence, while women in agriculture jobs faced a smaller risk of severe physical violence and sexual violence.
The empirical link between women's employment status and their experience of different types of intimate partner violence (IPV) is not very apparent. Using Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) data from 19 developing countries in South Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East, we found that working women were significantly more likely to experience IPV than their stay-at-home counterparts. Given the great diversity in women's employment with respect to economic returns and working conditions, we disaggregated women's employment into three categories vis-a-vis agriculture jobs (AJ), blue-collar jobs (BJ), and white-collar jobs (WJ). The disaggregated analysis revealed that women engaged in all three job categories were significantly more likely to experience IPV. After controlling for potential endogeneity of women's employment, we found that women's work increased the risk of less severe physical violence (LSPV) and emotional violence (EV) but reduced the risk of sexual violence (SV). Endogeneity-adjusted disaggregated analysis showed that women engaged in BJ and WJ faced an increased risk of LSPV but reduced risk of SV. In contrast, women undertaking AJ faced a smaller risk of severe physical violence (SPV) and SV. This study contradicts some long-held beliefs that women's work is a sufficient condition for protecting them from IPV. The public policy should not assume that women's earnings automatically protect them against the risk of IPV. While encouraging a greater female labor force participation rate is important in its own right, women's risk of IPV is context-specific.

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