Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
955629 Social Science Research 2015 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Women’s childhood access to school reduces the likelihood of wife beatings.•Women’s own and their parents’ education reduces beatings by their husbands.•Husbands’ education is a particularly powerful force reducing wife beatings.

This paper investigates the association between mass education and married women’s experience with domestic violence in rural Nepal. Previous research on domestic violence in South Asian societies emphasizes patriarchal ideology and the widespread subordinate status of women within their communities and families. The recent spread of mass education is likely to shift these gendered dynamics, thereby lowering women’s likelihood of experiencing domestic violence. Using data from 1775 currently married women from the Chitwan Valley Family Study in Nepal, we provide a thorough analysis of how the spread of mass education is associated with domestic violence among married women. The results show that women’s childhood access to school, their parents’ schooling, their own schooling, and their husbands’ schooling are each associated with their lower likelihood of experiencing domestic violence. Indeed, husbands’ education has a particularly strong, inverse association with women’s likelihood of experiencing domestic violence. These associations suggest that the proliferation of mass education will lead to a marked decline in women’s experience with domestic violence in Nepal.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Social Psychology
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