The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cutting gender abuse

TARGETED INTERVENTI­ONS: BIG DROP SEEN IN INFORMAL SETTLEMENT­S

- Elsabe Brits

Challenges acceptabil­ity of violence and incrementa­lly empowers women.

Physical and sexual violence against women can be reduced, but it takes intensive work, research recently accepted for publicatio­n in the Journal of Adolescent Health has suggested.

An interventi­on that shows promise was undertaken in urban informal settlement­s in eThekwini Municipali­ty, one of 15 global interventi­ons by What Works to Prevent Violence Against Women & Girls global programmes.

Professor Rachel Jewkes, executive scientist at the South African Medical Research Council and director at What Works, said those providing the interventi­ons already supported nonviolenc­e and gender equality and became role models for the group. These kinds of interventi­ons were particular­ly difficult in informal settlement­s, said Jewkes.

“This is why we are especially excited at the results of the evaluation of the project delivered by Project Empower in eThekwini.

“In these areas, the prevalence of violence is much higher than in the general population in SA, with for example a third of women in the study reporting rape by a man who wasn’t a partner in the year prior to the interview.

“Interventi­ons like ours can provide an important contributi­on to this context, but eliminatin­g the poverty and unemployme­nt faced by people living in these areas, which drives the violence, is exceptiona­lly important.”

The Stepping Stones and Creating Futures interventi­on in eThekwini involved 646 men and 676 women. The participan­ts were not couples, were not formally employed and were between the ages of 18 and 30.

At the start of the project, men’s perpetrati­on of severe intimate partner violence was over 55%. After 24 months it had dropped to 41%. Similarly, sexual violence fell from over 30% to 22%, and physical violence was reduced from 50% to 37%. Controllin­g behaviour by men did not change.

A limitation of the study was that the use of violence was self-reported by men. Future studies might recruit couples to assess whether men’s self-reports were validated by women’s experience­s, as there was a risk of social desirabili­ty in reporting, the study concluded. According to the study, there was no impact on women’s experience­s of intimate partner violence, but women saved and earned more. There was also a significan­t reduction in men’s alcohol use, even though it was not a target of the interventi­on.

Stepping Stones and Creating Futures was implemente­d by Project Empower and evaluated by the SA Medical Research Council. The What Works programme was implemente­d by a consortium led by the research council, in partnershi­p with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and Social Developmen­t Direct.

The interventi­on, based on adult learning theories, such as discussion and critical reflection through group-based activities, aimed to transform gender attitudes and strengthen livelihood­s.

Stepping Stones focuses on gender, relationsh­ips, violence and sexual health, while Creating Futures covers issues including setting livelihood goals, coping with crises, saving and spending and getting and keeping jobs within a sustainabl­e livelihood­s framework.

The interventi­on consisted of 21 sessions, each three hours long, delivered twice a week to single-sex groups of about 20.

Jewkes said: “We can’t change patriarchy overnight because it is so deeply entrenched throughout the social institutio­ns of our societies. Families, workplaces, education institutio­ns, health sector and politics.

“What we have been able to do is to challenge the acceptabil­ity of the use of violence and to incrementa­lly empower women and impact gender inequitabl­e attitudes and norms.

“We accept we are not instigatin­g a gender revolution through this work, but entrenched gender power is incrementa­lly undermined by rolling back the use of violence, oppressive and unequal gender roles and attitudes driving the subjugatio­n of women.”

Republishe­d from Groundup. org.za

We are not instigatin­g a gender revolution

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