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Men’s use of economic coercion against women in rural Bangladesh

Authors :
Emily C. Dore
Monique Hennink
Ruchira Tabassum Naved
Stephanie Spaid Miedema
Aloka Talukder
Alison Hoover
Kathryn M. Yount
Source :
Psychol Violence
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2022.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Bangladesh is historically a patriarchal society, but has made recent strides in increasing educational and economic opportunities for women. Yet men continue to perpetrate economic coercion and other forms of intimate partner violence against women in Bangladesh. This study examines how men in rural Bangladesh shape the economic activities of their wives within the context of changing norms around women’s involvement in economic domains. Men’s perspectives are not often explored in the literature and can provide valuable insight into how and why economic coercion persists. METHOD: 25 in-depth interviews were conducted with men in rural Bangladesh and analyzed using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Men engaged in economically coercive practices, both implicitly and explicitly. Three themes captured how men perpetrated economic coercion: they held gendered expectations about how and if women should participate in economic activities, they monitored women’s activities to ensure they conformed to the men’s gendered expectations, and they placed explicit restrictions on women’s economic activities to align with and maintain gender inequitable norms. CONCLUSION: These findings call attention to how men continue to see themselves as dominant over women in rural Bangladesh, despite the progress made in expanding educational and economic opportunities for women. The analysis points to the need for interventions that go beyond increased access to educational and economic programs for women to address the persistence of gender inequitable norms within patriarchal societies.

Details

ISSN :
2152081X and 21520828
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychology of Violence
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ddc5b52a4e4c3812b8bb7644904dc8f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/vio0000417