| Literature DB >> 30899324 |
Nancy Perrin1, Mendy Marsh2, Amber Clough1, Amelie Desgroppes3, Clement Yope Phanuel4, Ali Abdi3, Francesco Kaburu3, Silje Heitmann5, Masumi Yamashina6, Brendan Ross7, Sophie Read-Hamilton8, Rachael Turner1, Lori Heise1,9, Nancy Glass1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gender-based violence (GBV) primary prevention programs seek to facilitate change by addressing the underlying causes and drivers of violence against women and girls at a population level. Social norms are contextually and socially derived collective expectations of appropriate behaviors. Harmful social norms that sustain GBV include women's sexual purity, protecting family honor over women's safety, and men's authority to discipline women and children. To evaluate the impact of GBV prevention programs, our team sought to develop a brief, valid, and reliable measure to examine change over time in harmful social norms and personal beliefs that maintain and tolerate sexual violence and other forms of GBV against women and girls in low resource and complex humanitarian settings.Entities:
Keywords: Gender-based violence; Global health; Humanitarian; Metrics; Scale; Social norms
Year: 2019 PMID: 30899324 PMCID: PMC6408811 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-019-0189-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Demographic characteristics of participants N (percent)
| Yei | Warrup | Mogadishu | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Male | 100 (50.0) | 100 (49.8) | 101 (50.2) |
| Female | 100 (50.0) | 101 (50.2) | 100 (49.8) |
| Age | |||
| 15–17 years old | 42 (21.0) | 38 (18.9) | 47 (23.4) |
| 18–24 years old | 54 (27.0) | 42 (20.9) | 42 (20.9) |
| 25–44 years old | 49 (24.5) | 41 (20.4) | 41 (20.4) |
| 45–60 years old | 43 (21.5) | 39 (19.4) | 39 (19.4) |
| 61 or older | 11 (5.5) | 40 (19.9) | 40 (19.9) |
| Missing | 1 (0.5) | 1 (0.5) | 0 |
| Marital Status | |||
| Married | 107 (53.5) | 121 (60.2) | 125 (62.2) |
| Previously married | 29 (14.5) | 22 (10.9) | 21 (10.4) |
| Never married | 64 (32.0) | 56 (27.9) | 54 (26.9) |
| Did not respond | 0 | 2 (1.0) | 1 (0.5) |
| Children | |||
| 1 or more children | 134 (67.0) | 138 (68.7) | 134 (66.7) |
| Occupation | |||
| Housewife | 50 (25.0) | 55 (27.4) | 72 (35.8) |
| Working | 66 (33.0) | 67 (33.3) | 74 (36.8) |
| Looking for work | 22 (11.0) | 17 (8.5) | 22 (10.9) |
| Too old to work | 9 (4.5) | 13 (6.5) | 6 (3.0) |
| Student | 53 (26.5) | 49 (24.0) | 27 (13.4) |
Factor loadings and Cronbach alphas (last row of table) for the injunctive social norms scales (N = 587)
| How many of the people whose opinion matters most to you: | Response to Sexual Violence | Protecting Family Honor | Husband’s Right to Use Violence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expect a husband to abandon his wife if she reports that she has been raped | .671 | .038 | .020 |
| Expect the family to ignore/reject a daughter if she reports that she has been raped | .556 | .100 | .023 |
| Accept sexual violence against women and girls a normal part of life | .507 | .091 | .159 |
| Blame women/girls when they are raped | .477 | .054 | .141 |
| Think that a man should have the right to demand sex from a woman or girl even if he is not married to her | .476 | −.014 | .146 |
| Expect women/girls to not report rape to protect the family dignity | −.026 | .739 | −.092 |
| Expect that a woman/girl’s reputation will be damaged if she reports sexual violence to the authorities or elders | .136 | .594 | .030 |
| Fear stigma if they were to report sexual violence | .212 | .522 | −.097 |
| Expect sexual violence to be handled within the family and not reported to authorities | .186 | .521 | −.033 |
| Expect a husband or father to retaliate against the alleged perpetrators | −.207 | .445 | .148 |
| Expect women and girls to only report sexual violence if they have serious physical injuries | .055 | .419 | .049 |
| Think that when a man beats his wife, he is showing his love for her | −.025 | −.015 | .662 |
| Think that a man has the right to beat/punish his wife | .129 | .030 | .618 |
| Think it is okay for a husband to beat his wife to discipline her | .040 | .075 | .552 |
| Expect a husband to force his wife to have sex when she does not want to | .143 | −.061 | .430 |
| Cronbach’s Alpha | 0.75 | 0.73 | 0.69 |
Factor structure and Cronbach’s alpha (last row of table) for the personal beliefs scales (N = 587)
| How ready or willing are you to take action by speaking out on each issue | Response to Sexual Violence | Husband’s Right to Use Violence | Protecting Family Honor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Husbands should abandon/reject/divorce their wife if she reports that she has been raped | .616 | −.016 | −.075 |
| A man should have the right to demand sex from a woman or girl even if he is not married to her | .537 | .113 | .092 |
| A woman/girl would be stigmatized if she were to report sexual violence | .524 | −.275 | −.326 |
| A woman/girl should be blamed when she has been raped | .506 | .137 | .024 |
| Sexual violence against women and girls should be accepted as a normal part of life | .457 | .127 | −.070 |
| Families should ignore/reject a daughter if she reports that she has been raped | .454 | .027 | −.017 |
| It is okay for a husband to beat his wife to discipline her | .034 | .707 | −.095 |
| When a man beats his wife, he is showing his love for her | .037 | .635 | −.025 |
| A man has the right to beat/punish his wife | .240 | .580 | −.059 |
| A husband should force his wife to have sex when she does not want to | .192 | .464 | −.045 |
| Women/girls should not report rape to protect the family dignity | .000 | .028 | −.714 |
| A woman/girl’s reputation will be damaged if she reports sexual violence to the authorities | .133 | .003 | −.641 |
| Sexual violence should be handled within the family and not reported to authorities | .132 | −.127 | −.621 |
| A husband or father should retaliate against the alleged perpetrators | −.144 | .276 | −.512 |
| Women and girls should only report sexual violence if they have serious physical injuries | −.016 | .053 | −.497 |
| Cronbach’s Alpha | 0.71 | 0.77 | 0.75 |
Descriptive statistics for subscales within each domain (N = 587)
| Min | Max | Mean | Std. Dev. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Injunctive Social Norms1 | ||||
| Response to Sexual Violence | 1.00 | 4.60 | 2.00 | 0.77 |
| Protecting Family Honor | 1.00 | 5.00 | 2.77 | 0.79 |
| Husband’s Right to Use Violence | 1.00 | 5.00 | 2.38 | 0.84 |
| Personal Beliefs2 | ||||
| Response to Sexual Violence | 1.33 | 4.00 | 3.29 | 0.64 |
| Protecting Family Honor | 1.00 | 4.00 | 2.61 | 0.88 |
| Husband’s Right to Use Violence | 1.00 | 4.00 | 2.90 | 0.93 |
1Social Norm Response Scale: 1 – None of them, 2 – A few of them, 3 – About half of them, 4 – Most of them, 5 – All of them
2Personal Beliefs Response Scale: 1 – Agree with this statement, 2 – I am not sure if I agree or disagree with this statement, 3 – I disagree but am not ready to tell others, 4 – I am telling others that this is wrong
Gender differences on subscales within the Injunctive Social Norms and Personal Beliefs domains – Means (SD)
| Male | Female | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Injunctive Social Norms | |||
| Response to Sexual Violence | 1.90 (0.64) | 2.10 (0.88) | .002 |
| Protecting Family Honour | 2.67 (0.78) | 2.88 (0.80) | .001 |
| Husband’s Right to Use Violence | 2.26 (0.71) | 2.50 (0.94) | <.001 |
| Personal Beliefs | |||
| Response to Sexual Violence | 3.32 (0.67) | 3.26 (0.59) | .250 |
| Protecting Family Honour | 2.77 (0.96) | 2.45 (0.86) | <.001 |
| Husband’s Right to Use Violence | 3.02 (0.89) | 2.78 (0.91) | .001 |