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Men’s Violence Against Women In Rural Bangladesh

 

This feature is published from a joint work of Research and Training Institute, Arlington, USA, Department of Economics, Jahangirnagar University, Dhaka, Bangladesh and Development Research Center, Dhaka, Bangladesh

 

   

Men’s violence against women compromises women’s health and well being in a wide variety of social settings. It takes various forms, and the extent to which it is condoned or stigmatized, open or hidden can vary considerably. Violence against women is typically enmeshed in a complex web of institutionalized social relations that make women particularly vulnerable to it. Women often put up with men’s violence because they see no acceptable alternatives and their lack of alternatives is often part of the larger cultural logic that sanctions the violence. The experience of women’s organizations working to reduce violence against women suggests that it is necessary to undermine both the individual victim’s acceptance of violence and its support by the society or subculture.    

  

Background of the offence 

  

The patriarchal system in Bangladesh isolates women within their families and gives men control over most economic resources. In the ideal version of the traditional rural Bangladeshi Muslim family, women are secluded to protect them and maintain their honor. Women’s work and lives take place within the sheltered confines of the extended family home and compound. Men are seen as the providers; they work outside of the home and control interactions between the family and the world outside. In contemporary rural life whatever high valuation of women traditionally or ideally was attached to female seclusion is largely absent. Often men cannot provide adequately because of economic circumstances, but women remain dependent on them. Many women have no independent sources of income, little or no education and few marketable skills, no independent property or money and no socially sanctioned identity outside of the family. Discrimination against women and girls in everyday life is rationalized by the fact that they are seen as an economic burden. Girls learn to accept dependence and depravation relative male family members. In extremely poor families where frequently there is not enough for everyone, this means that women and girls are most likely to go without a meal, to eat inadequate meals, to go without warm clothing in the winter and to receive minimal health care and education. 

  

Statistics of Deprivation of Rural Women  

 

The deprivation faced by poor rural women and female children is starkly reflected in country –level statistics. Life expectancy for women is typically somewhat higher than that for men. But statistics in Bangladesh women’s life expectancy was as follows 

 

 

Year Men Women
1990 58 49
1994 58 58

                                         

 

In 1994 it was estimated a substantial improvement but still reflecting extreme levels of poverty and sex discrimination when compared with nearby countries such as Sri Lanka where life expectancy was 71 for men and 75 for women in 1994.   

  

Infectious disease morbidity in Bangladesh is higher among women than among men.   

 

Caloric intake is low and the rate of severe malnutrition’s nearly three times as high among female children than among male children.

 

Infant and child mortality rates are substantially higher for females than for males  

 

Seventy-eight percent of adult female were classified as illiterate in 1993, compared with 53% of adult men.

 

The percentage secondary-school age girls enrolled at that level (14%) was just over half that for boys (26%).

 

Source:( World bank 1990,  UN Population fund 1995)

 

Early Marriage for low cost of dowry

 

Often girls are married off early for fear that dowry costs will escalate with their age at marriage and many are married to men who are considerably older. In general, the early years of marriage are a time when a young women is expected to prove her fertility, and there is unspoken assumption that she is not supposed to have independent desires and goals of her own, nor make decisions, even in matters related to her own health and welfare.  Violence against women tends to be most intense during the early years of marriage.  

 

Omvedt observations of rural India

 

Omvedt underscores the connection between violence against women and their economic vulnerability in her review of the Resolution document from a major women’s conference held in Patna, northern India, pointing out that the relation between violence and women’s economic exploitation and dependence is circular.  

  

On the one hand, she observes, the threat of violence keeps women from gaining control of economic resource. It prevents millions of women from claming their legal rights to property inheritance and it often keeps them from going out of the home to take advantage of economic opportunities, forcing them to do unpaid or low-paid labor. 

 

At the same time, they are unable to combat violence because of their economic dependence. When women are largely confined to their homes they are relatively sheltered from external “social violence” by local thugs, landlords, contractors, police and others, but, as Omvedt observes; “the very family that protects them is also the sources of the greatest violence against them.”

 

Although violence by men against women in Bangladesh occurs in most cases within the home, in a large sense it does not originate in the home nor persist only within the home. It is simply one element in a system that subordinates women through social norms that define women’s place and guide their conduct. Public manifestations of violence against women in response to over violation of gender norms are very much a part of the social landscape of rural Bangladesh and take severe forms, but they occur much less frequently than domestic violence. As with many forms of social and political control, for the most part it is the fear of rather than the experience of sanctions that coerces both men and women into accepting and supporting the strictures under which they live. In contrast to public violence, women in rural Bangladesh not only fear but often experience domestic violence. 

  

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