학술논문

Measuring social norms of intimate partner violence to exert control over wife agency, sexuality, and reproductive autonomy: an item response modelling of the IPV-ASRA scale.
Document Type
Article
Source
Reproductive Health. 6/14/2023, Vol. 20 Issue 1, p1-12. 12p.
Subject
*VIOLENCE prevention
*AUTHORITY
*SOCIAL norms
*HUMAN sexuality
*RESEARCH methodology evaluation
*WOMEN'S rights
*RURAL conditions
*VIOLENCE
*INTIMATE partner violence
*GENDER
*SPOUSES
*PSYCHOMETRICS
*AUTONOMY (Psychology)
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*RESEARCH funding
*REPRODUCTIVE rights
*CONTROL (Psychology)
*PSYCHOSOCIAL factors
RESEARCH evaluation
Language
ISSN
1742-4755
Abstract
Background: The field of violence prevention research is unequivocal that interventions must target contextual factors, like social norms, to reduce gender-based violence. Limited research, however, on the social norms contributing to intimate partner violence or reproductive coercion exists. One of the driving factors is lack of measurement tools to accurately assess social norms. Methods: Using an item response modelling approach, this study psychometrically assesses the reliability and validity of a social norms measure of the acceptability of intimate partner violence to exert control over wife agency, sexuality, and reproductive autonomy with data from a population-based sample of married adolescent girls (ages 13–18) and their husbands in rural Niger (n = 559 husband-wife dyads) collected in 2019. Results: A two-dimensional Partial Credit Model for polytomous items was fit, showing evidence of reliability and validity. Higher scores on the "challenging husband authority" dimension were statistically associated with husband perpetration of intimate partner violence. Conclusions: This brief scale is a short (5 items), practical measure with strong reliability and validity evidence. This scale can help identify populations with high-need for social norms-focused IPV prevention and to help measure the impact of such efforts. Plain language summary: Long-term prevention of gender-based violence, like intimate partner violence and reproductive coercion, requires efforts to change the social environment that facilitates violence against women, yet limited research is available on how to change social environments. One reason is that there are few tools to accurately measure social environments, including social norms, which are the unspoken rules about what behavior is acceptable and what behavior is not. The present research assessed a new social norms measurement tool on the acceptability of intimate partner violence to exert control over wife agency, sexuality, and reproductive autonomy using data from a population-based sample of married adolescents and their husbands in rural Niger (n = 559 husband-wife dyads) collected in 2019. We found that this scale had strong reliability and validity, and that the group of questions about challenging husband authority were related to husband perpetration of intimate partner violence against his wife. This brief scale is a short (5 questions), practical measure with strong reliability and validity evidence that can help identify populations with high-need for social norms-focused prevention and to help measure the impact of such efforts. This evidence strengthens the current set of measurement tools on social norms available to researchers and practitioners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]