Drivers of intimate partner violence against women in three refugee camps
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Date
2017-02-19
Citation
Wachter, K., Horn, R., Friis, E., Falb, K., Ward, L., Apio, C., Wanjiku, S. and Puffer, E. (2018) ‘Drivers of intimate partner violence against women in three refugee camps’, Violence Against Women, 24(3), pp. 286–306. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177/1077801216689163.
Abstract
This qualitative study examined the drivers- of intimate partner violence (IPV) against women in displacement to identify protective factors and patterns of risk. Qualitative data were collected in three refugee camps in South Sudan, Kenya, and Iraq (N = 284). Findings revealed interrelated factors that triggered and perpetuated IPV: gendered social norms and roles, destabilization of gender norms and roles, men's substance use, women's separation from family, and rapid remarriages and forced marriages. These factors paint a picture of individual, family, community and societal processes that exacerbate women's risk of IPV in extreme conditions created by displacement. Implications for policy and practice are indicated.