Using cross-national data, we analyze the effects of economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, political empowerment, legislating reserved seats for female political candidates, and prevalence of domestic violence victimization on lethal violence against women across 39 nations. These significant factors have been studied individually with little work on their comparative, unique effects on femicide. Our paper makes such a comparison. The dependent variable, femicide by intimate partners and family members, is constructed using data from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime and the World Bank Group. All data are for the year 2011, a year that also corresponds to available data in the sources for our independent variables. These sources are the 2011 World Economic Forum Global Gender Gap Report, the United Nations Statistics Division, International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. Our resulting sample size is 39 countries from five regions of the world: Northern and Eastern Europe ( = 7), Southern and Western Europe ( = 11), Asia and Oceania ( = 7) Africa ( = 2), and the Americas ( = 12). The unit of analysis is nation and the total number of cases of femicide by intimate partners and family members from the nations is 2,067,450,894. Our study supports backlash theory and finds in nations where educational attainment and percent women reporting domestic violence are higher, and in nations having legislated quotas for female political participation, the incidents of femicide by intimate partner and family members increase. Counter to most previous research, we find no relationship between economic participation and opportunity or political empowerment and femicide by intimate partners and family members.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/VV-D-20-00088 | DOI Listing |
Rev Bras Enferm
December 2024
Universidade Federal de Pelotas. Pelotas, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
Objectives: to understand the narratives of sex workers about violence suffered by intimate partners and their coping strategies.
Methods: qualitative research, focused on thematic oral history, carried out with six sex workers in southern Brazil, who responded to in-depth interviews using a flexible script. Thematic content analysis was used.
Int J Soc Psychiatry
November 2024
Aix Marseille Univ, LPS, ISSPAM, Aix-en-Provence, France.
Objective: This study aims to analyze how the press portrays cases of revictimization experienced by women in France, through the lens of social representation theory.
Method: An exploratory, descriptive study was conducted using a corpus of 157 online press articles. A total of 187,773 words and 5,240 segments were analyzed using Iramuteq version 7, employing top-down hierarchical classification and lexical similarity analysis.
Heliyon
September 2024
Department of Psychology, Universidad Loyola Andalucia, Seville, 41704, Andalusia, Spain.
Intimate partner femicide (IPF) is a grave social and health concern affecting women worldwide, with approximately 30,000 deaths annually at the hands of their current or former intimate partners. Previous studies have focused on identifying risk factors for IPF and developing risk assessment tools to identify high-risk cases. However, an important aspect that has been overlooked in these studies is victims' coping strategies in response to intimate partner violence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Forensic Leg Med
October 2024
Office of the State Pathologist, Dublin, Ireland; School of Medicine, University College Dublin, Ireland.
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