Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Intimate Partner Violence during Pregnancy—A Qualitative Study from Ethiopia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Theoretical Framework
The Theory of Gender and Power
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Setting
Participants
2.3. Data Collection Tools and Procedures
2.4. Data Processing and Analysis
2.5. Ethics and Consent:
3. Results
3.1. Reconciliation
“I have met many victims and the solutions given depend on the case, some reconciliation, some to police and others to courts, but there is no guarantee. One lady was killed after reconciled with her abusing husband”. (Women’s affairs representative)
“When we advise women about their rights, we fear that it may increase divorce rate as a consequence; we do not support divorce as it is bringing us so many consequences, including children of the divorced family, become more raped, become street children….etc., and it goes vicious circle”. (Male judge)
“I meet partners in conflict almost every day, I have a characteristics/gift of repairing the marriage, but sometimes the aftermath may come to me (Priest), especially when it comes to those drunk ones”. (Religious leader)
“We strongly condemn divorce; our bible prohibited divorce, it is sinful, it should only be death that separate couples; whenever there is a conflict between couples, they have to excuse each other.… Jesus is the lord of forgiveness, and this apology helps us to preserve family and children, generation and our country”. (Religious leader)
3.2. Reluctance Involving Police
“IPV should be reported to the police, but some male police officers do have a problem to deal with this issue; they may even be violent towards their wives. When their victimized wives come to me, I will be taking their history together with my supervisor because I am afraid of male police abusers, and many police officers do not consider IPV as violence”. (Female police).
“…it should be reported to police, not to let it happen again and take a lesson for others”. (Male prosecutor)
“…it is challenging, in fact, police or court can be a better solution because most men are afraid to step in the police office, court and be punished. On one hand, police and court may have worst ending because he (abuser) may take a strong decision to end the marriage, while divorce for a housewife with a lot of children…hmmm is difficult; on the other hand, to local mediators, or to us (Imam) may not last long/unsuccessful most of the time”. (Religious leader)
3.3. Limited Awareness of the Consequences and Adversity of IPV in Pregnancy
“Partner violence during pregnancy, I think it may impact foetal development, and foetus may not be healthy”. (Female judge)
”During pregnancy, beating may cause serious danger for the foetus. ‘Foetus listens what is happening outside’, meaning if she feels happy, it feels the same; if she is disturbed foetus will also be disturbed”. (Religious leader)
“Pregnancy brings many problems to the mother and foetus. The husband may even have left her and turn to other ladies”. (Women’s affairs representative)
“I met a lady, who was attacked by her husband and sent to her family with two children when she came back after a month, she found another lady in her own house”. (Women’s affair representative)
“Violence in pregnancy involves death; it may result in bleeding and abortion”. (Female police)
3.4. Lack of Coordinated Responses or Strategic Plan Addressing IPV
“We do not have a network, even no security even for us, some men used to come to our office and threaten to kill us”. (Women’s affairs representative)
“Because we don’t have strong relationships with women’s affairs office, depending on the case, but mostly we reconcile many victims with their abusive partner, some will be referred to local mediation”. (Female judge)
“I meet many victims, but I met one on my way home; she was term pregnant, evicted from her house, I took her to the local court and link her to women’s affairs, and they let the community contribute some money for her survival as the last resort.”
“There was this female officer who quarrels with her husband because she took home a woman victim of partner violence who had nowhere to go”. (Male police officer)
“Jesus is the Lord of forgiveness and forgiveness is infinite”. (Religious leader)
4. Discussion
4.1. Reconciliation as the Main Response
4.2. Reluctance to Initiate OfficersAction
4.3. Limited Awareness of the Consequences of IPV during Pregnancy
4.4. Lack of Coordinated Responses or Strategic Plan
4.5. Study Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant Characteristics | n | |
---|---|---|
Age | 18–35 | 5 |
36–50 | 8 | |
51 & above | 3 | |
Gender | Male | 10 |
Female | 6 | |
Marital status | Married | 15 |
Single | 1 | |
Religion | Orthodox | 5 |
Muslim | 6 | |
Protestant | 5 | |
Level of education | Grades 6–12 | 1 |
Above 12th grade | 15 | |
Occupation | Law enforcing bodies (police officers, judges, and prosecutors) | 7 |
Religious leaders | 7 | |
Women’s affairs | 2 |
Meaning Units | Condensed Meaning Units | Codes | Sub-Themes |
---|---|---|---|
Most prefer to reconcile victims with their attacker, advice to calm down and tolerate or not to divorce Neighbours should not interfere Repairing marriage, make a prayer... (religious leaders) No need to report to police | Reconciliation, tolerance, prayer repairing marriage as a solution A tendency not to report IPV cases to police | Reconciliation is commonly preferred Keeping with the marriage | Reconciliation was taken as the best solution to attenuate IPV (social norms, values and attitude) |
Women have nowhere to go Most women are economically dependent on their partner | Most women are economically dependent | Economic dependency | Women’s economic dependency as a barrier not to leave an abusive partner (the structure of the sexual division of labour and power) |
Women having many children should not or do not want to leave their children behind We fear the consequences of divorce | Women should stay in abusive relationships for the sake of their children fear of the consequences of divorce | Having children Fear of divorce | Having children and fear of divorce as a barrier not to leave abusive partner, (sexual division of labour, social norms, values and attitude) |
Police officers do not take IPV seriously Society accepts partner violence as normal IPV is considered as a family and private issue, while women accept IPV and even defend their abuser Married women are more respected No separate record for IPV in the court office Divorce is sinful Women are expected not to leave their children Children of a divorced family are disrespected by society Women are powerless The patriarchal system favours men Marriage is highly valued Women need protection | Considering IPV as normal and/expected Women are expected to sacrifice valuing marriage Perceiving women as powerless A child of a divorced family is disrespected | Trivializing and/or acceptance of IPV Expecting women to sacrifice Social stigma | The structure of cathexis (Patriarchal views, social norms, values, and attitude) |
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Gashaw, B.T.; Magnus, J.H.; Schei, B.; Solbraekke, K.N. Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Intimate Partner Violence during Pregnancy—A Qualitative Study from Ethiopia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 4694. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234694
Gashaw BT, Magnus JH, Schei B, Solbraekke KN. Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Intimate Partner Violence during Pregnancy—A Qualitative Study from Ethiopia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(23):4694. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234694
Chicago/Turabian StyleGashaw, Bosena Tebeje, Jeanette H. Magnus, Berit Schei, and Kari Nyheim Solbraekke. 2019. "Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Intimate Partner Violence during Pregnancy—A Qualitative Study from Ethiopia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 23: 4694. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234694
APA StyleGashaw, B. T., Magnus, J. H., Schei, B., & Solbraekke, K. N. (2019). Community Stakeholders’ Perspectives on Intimate Partner Violence during Pregnancy—A Qualitative Study from Ethiopia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(23), 4694. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16234694