Literature DB >> 29132284

Love matters: exploring conceptions of love in Rwanda and Swaziland and relationship to HIV and intimate partner violence.

Allison Ruark1, Erin Stern2, Thandeka Dlamini-Simelane3, Marie Fidele Kakuze4.   

Abstract

Health risks such as intimate partner violence (IPV) and HIV infection often occur within intimate sexual relationships, yet the study of love and intimacy is largely absent from health research on African populations. This study explores how women and men in Rwanda and Swaziland understand and represent love in their intimate sexual partnerships. In Rwanda, 58 in-depth interviews with 15 couples, 12 interviews with activists, and 24 focus group discussions were carried out during formative and evaluative research of the Indashyikirwa programme, which aims to reduce IPV and support healthy couple relationships. In Swaziland, 117 in-depth, life-course interviews with 14 women and 14 men focused on understanding intimate sexual partnerships. We analysed these qualitative data thematically using a Grounded Theory approach. Participants described love as being foundational to their intimate sexual partnerships. Women and men emphasised that love is seen and expressed through actions and tangible evidence such as gifts and material support, acts of service, showing intentions for marriage, sexual faithfulness, and spending time together. Some participants expressed ambivalent narratives regarding love, gifts, and money, acknowledging that they desired partners who demonstrated love through material support while implying that true love should be untainted by desires for wealth. IPV characterised many relationships and was perceived as a threat to love, even as love was seen as a potential antidote to IPV. Careful scholarship of love is critical to better understand protective and risk factors for HIV and IPV and for interventions that seek to ameliorate these risks.

Entities:  

Keywords:  cultural change; gift-sex exchange; globalisation; intimacy; marriage; relationship quality

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29132284      PMCID: PMC5907914          DOI: 10.2989/16085906.2017.1343740

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Afr J AIDS Res        ISSN: 1608-5906            Impact factor:   1.300


  20 in total

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4.  The feminine ideal and transactional sex: Navigating respectability and risk in Swaziland.

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Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2016-04-07       Impact factor: 4.634

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7.  Women's responses to intimate partner violence in Rwanda: Rethinking agency in constrained social contexts.

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Journal:  Glob Public Health       Date:  2015-03-03

8.  'Love of the heart': romantic love among young mothers in Mali.

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Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2010-05

9.  Sex, money, and premarital partnerships in southern Malawi.

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Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2007-08-30       Impact factor: 4.634

10.  An empirical investigation of attitudes towards wife-beating among men and women in seven sub-Saharan African countries.

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Journal:  Afr J Reprod Health       Date:  2004-12
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  4 in total

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2.  Women's sexual scripting in the context of universal access to antiretroviral treatment-findings from the HPTN 071 (PopART) trial in South Africa.

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Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2021-10-24       Impact factor: 2.742

3.  Constrained relationship agency as the risk factor for intimate partner violence in different models of transactional sex.

Authors:  Rebecca Fielding-Miller; Kristin Dunkle
Journal:  Afr J AIDS Res       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 1.300

4.  A systematic review of the effects of intimate partner violence on HIV-positive pregnant women in sub-Saharan Africa.

Authors:  Ashley Magero Yonga; Ligia Kiss; Kristine Husøy Onarheim
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2022-02-03       Impact factor: 3.295

  4 in total

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