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Journal Article

Citation

James-Hawkins L, Cheong YF, Naved RT, Yount KM. Psychol. Violence 2018; 8(5): 580-595.

Affiliation

Asa Griggs Candler Chair of Global Health and Professor of Global Health and Sociology, Emory University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1037/vio0000152

PMID

30225157

PMCID

PMC6138445

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Coercive control in marriage is common in patriarchal settings, but multilevel determinants are understudied.

METHOD: Using a probability sample of 570 junior men (married, 18-34 years) from the Bangladesh survey of the 2011 UN Multi-Country Study of Men and Violence, we examined how exposure to violence in childhood and community-level gender norms were related to men's attitudes about gender equity and use of controlling behavior. We tested whether community-level gender norms moderated the relationship between men's exposure to violence in childhood and our outcomes.

RESULTS: According to results from multilevel Poisson regression models, as community gender norms become more equitable by 1 standard deviation, a junior married man's expected rate of controlling behavior is lower by 0.11, and his rate of agreement with gender equitable attitudes is higher by 0.27. More gender-equitable community norms were negatively related to a junior married man's use of controlling behavior. Childhood exposure to violence was not associated with use of controlling behavior. There was a significant cross-level interaction such that exposure to violence had a stronger negative impact on men's gender equitable attitudes in communities with lower overall gender equity than those with higher overall gender equity. The corresponding cross-level interaction effect was not significant for the controlling behavior outcome.

CONCLUSIONS: More equitable community gender norms may encourage more gender-equitable attitudes and discourage use of controlling behavior among junior men, suggesting that interventions to change community gender norms may reduce coercive control of women in marriage.


Language: en

Keywords

child maltreatment; community gender norms; controlling behavior; domestic violence; intimate partner violence; multilevel analysis

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