Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South Africa

Although adolescents’ exposure to violence and oppressive gender attitudes is prevalent, comparative knowledge across countries is sparse. This study examined exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV), family violence, and beliefs about violence against women (VAW) in a convenience sample of 2,462...

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Main Authors: Sunday B. Fakunmoju, Shahana Rasool
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2018-12-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244018817591
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spelling doaj-39e38bb9a24e4ee2b3de27e6039de40c2020-11-25T03:17:35ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402018-12-01810.1177/2158244018817591Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South AfricaSunday B. Fakunmoju0Shahana Rasool1University of Johannesburg, Auckland Park, South AfricaUniversity of Johannesburg, Auckland Park, South AfricaAlthough adolescents’ exposure to violence and oppressive gender attitudes is prevalent, comparative knowledge across countries is sparse. This study examined exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV), family violence, and beliefs about violence against women (VAW) in a convenience sample of 2,462 adolescents from 44 schools in Nigeria and South Africa. Findings suggested that exposure to IPV, family violence, and beliefs about VAW differed by gender and country. Specifically, adolescents from Nigeria were more likely to be exposed to IPV and family violence and were more likely to endorse VAW than adolescents from South Africa. Male adolescents were more likely to endorse VAW than were female adolescents. Similarly, higher age, being male, being from Nigeria, being in a relationship, and greater exposure to family violence were associated with higher endorsement of VAW. Findings suggest that effective prevention programs are needed in both countries to mitigate exposure to IPV and family violence. Concerted efforts are also required to work with exposed adolescents to inhibit pro-VAW beliefs and stop the intergenerational transmission of violence. Additional implications of findings for policy, practice, and research are discussed.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244018817591
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sunday B. Fakunmoju
Shahana Rasool
spellingShingle Sunday B. Fakunmoju
Shahana Rasool
Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South Africa
SAGE Open
author_facet Sunday B. Fakunmoju
Shahana Rasool
author_sort Sunday B. Fakunmoju
title Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South Africa
title_short Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South Africa
title_full Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South Africa
title_fullStr Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Exposure to Violence and Beliefs About Violence Against Women Among Adolescents in Nigeria and South Africa
title_sort exposure to violence and beliefs about violence against women among adolescents in nigeria and south africa
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Although adolescents’ exposure to violence and oppressive gender attitudes is prevalent, comparative knowledge across countries is sparse. This study examined exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV), family violence, and beliefs about violence against women (VAW) in a convenience sample of 2,462 adolescents from 44 schools in Nigeria and South Africa. Findings suggested that exposure to IPV, family violence, and beliefs about VAW differed by gender and country. Specifically, adolescents from Nigeria were more likely to be exposed to IPV and family violence and were more likely to endorse VAW than adolescents from South Africa. Male adolescents were more likely to endorse VAW than were female adolescents. Similarly, higher age, being male, being from Nigeria, being in a relationship, and greater exposure to family violence were associated with higher endorsement of VAW. Findings suggest that effective prevention programs are needed in both countries to mitigate exposure to IPV and family violence. Concerted efforts are also required to work with exposed adolescents to inhibit pro-VAW beliefs and stop the intergenerational transmission of violence. Additional implications of findings for policy, practice, and research are discussed.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244018817591
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