Risk Factors Leading to Violence Against Women

NOTE: ALL INFORMATION ON THIS PAGE COMES FROM THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

According to the World Health Organization, risk factors for both intimate partner and sexual violence include:

  • lower levels of education
  • perpetration or experience of sexual violence
  • a history of exposure to child abuse and mistreatment (perpetration and experience)
  • witnessing family violence (perpetration and experience);
  • antisocial personality disorder
  • alcohol abuse (perpetration and experience)
  • having multiple partners or being suspected by their partners of infidelity
  • normalization of violence, either in personal attitude or societal outlook
  • community norms that privilege or ascribe higher status to men and lower status to women
  • low levels of women’s access to paid employment.

Factors specifically associated with intimate partner violence include:

  • past history of violence
  • marital discord and dissatisfaction
  • difficulties in communicating between partners
  • male controlling behaviors towards their partners.

Factors specifically associated with sexual violence perpetration include:

  • beliefs in family honour and sexual purity
  • ideologies of male sexual entitlement
  • weak legal sanctions for sexual violence.

Gender inequality and norms on the acceptability of violence against women are a root cause of violence against women.

The link to the WHO page detailing these risk factors can be found below: https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/violence-against-women