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Journal Article

Citation

Svallfors S. Polit. Gender 2021; 1-33.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Cambridge University Press)

DOI

10.1017/S1743923X2100043X

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

The Colombian peace process was internationally celebrated for its unprecedented focus on women's experiences of war, but the everyday violence women that may face in their homes was not acknowledged. This article explores the links between exposure to local armed conflict violence and individual women's experiences of intimate partner violence. I combine pooled nationally representative data on individual women's experiences of intimate partner violence with information about the intensity of conflict during 2004-16.

RESULTS of fixed-effects linear probability models show that conflict was generally linked to a slightly elevated risk of women experiencing emotional, physical, and sexual violence perpetrated by their partner. Among women who had experienced intimate partner violence, conflict was related to an increased probability of being partnered at interview, which could reflect women staying in abusive relationships because conflict normalizes violence or increases women's reluctance to leave those relationships.


Language: en

Keywords

armed conflict; Colombia; gender; Intimate partner violence; women's health

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