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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

 

 

Credit Programs, Women's Income And Violence: Ethnographic Findings

Despite the lack of effect of women’s contribution to family support  on domestic violence in the multivariate analysis, evidence from the four credit program villages in the ethnographic study suggests that both the loans and the social dimensions of credit programs may help to inhibit violence against  women . Bringing home a resource that benefits men can protect women from violence. This is illustrated  in the case of S.

She and  her husband were so desperately poor  that local shopkeepers refused even to let them buy a small amount of kerosene oil on credit, and they were often forced to eat in the dark .After S, joined BRAC  and received her first loan she mortgaged in a small  piece of land . After giving the landowner his share at harvest time they still had three maunds of paddy, more than they had even dreamed of having in the house at one time. This was  enough to last them through the lean period, and enough to make them credit-worthy ( others  have since given them loans for cultivation) . Both she and  her close relatives told the researchers that her husband stopped beating her after she joined BRAC and their economic situation improved.

Although women who invest their credit program loans in their own enterprises and make independent contributions to their families support may experience greater levels of empowerment then women who do not control their own loans  as suggested earlier, the effect of credit programs in reducing violence against women does not seem to hinge on their talent to generate independent income from their loans. Rather, it appears that violence against women diminishes when the women bring home a resource ( in this case the loan money ), regardless of who actually uses the money .

Even though her ability to engage in independent economic activities and contribute directly to her  family’s support may be pre empted, when a man appropriates his wife’s loans, there is some acknowledgment that she is the source of this benefit and this improves her position in the household. Several women told the researchers that other members of the family were kinder and more respectful around the time that they were supposed to receive a new loan .In some cases also, the husband or other family members provided assistance with cooking, childcare or other domestic tasks to make it easier for the participant to attend meetings.

when a woman joins a credit program certain things happen right away . Women  immediately get public exposure when they attend the mandatory weekly meetings of the local credit group.  In  addition to providing public exposure, the group meetings also foster support networks outside of the family, which may provide sources of intervention or sanctuary . These immediate benefits are experienced by all members, regardless of whether their husbands appropriate their loans, and regardless of whether  they ever manage to earn  enough independent income to make a substantial  contribution to their families support. For those who do become involved  in independent income generating activities, it may take considerable time for the  activity to generate profits and as the woman’s  income increases there is often a period of struggle fore control over it, which may be associated with increased violence..  

Violence And Women's Empowerment

In the study villages it appears that redefinition of women’s roles and status in conjunction with their increased involvement in the cash economy is often accompanied by an escalation of violence by men against women. Case studies suggest that women who earn modest amounts of income and/or have some independent assets of their own are more likely to be beaten than women who have nothing of their own and are completely dependent on  their husbands. Since they have nothing, the latter have nothing to fight over and their is nothing to take away from them. Those who  are least  empowered  and most dependent tend to be so insecure that they go extremes to avoid provoking their husbands .  As women begin to earn independent incomes and increase their mobility and  autonomy conflicts often develop, particularly if their is no  mitigating influence such as a credit program. The conflicts have to do with  issues of control over women’s increased propensity to defend themselves against what they see as unfair domination and exploitation .

Expanding women’s access to economic opportunities and resources does not necessarily make them less vulnerable to domestic violence, at least  not right away . Levels of violence against women can vary considerably from village to village and greater involvement of women in income generation is sometimes associated with greater violence Among the six study villages the highest level of violence against women was in the village where it was most apparent that transformations in gender roles were underway .  Sixty percent of all women in this village (based on a survey of al married women of reproductive age) said their husbands had beaten them during the preceding year. As shown in Fig. I this village also had the highest percentage of women who were contributing to family supp9rt (41%). In contrast, the village with the smallest percentage of women who said that they had been beaten in the past year (14%) had very few women who were contributing to family support (10%) .Both of these were BRAC villages. There was   frequent conflict over frights to income and assets in the most violent village and 33% of the women said that their husbands  or other relatives had seized their money  of assets without their permission  during the year preceding the interview . Only 2% of the women from the least violent village said this. Asked to explain the high incidences of wife beating in his village, an elderly man from most violent village said:

Our wives would not be eaten so much if they were obedient and followed our orders, but women do not listen to us and so they get beaten often,

The most empowered women typically emerge from a period of conflict with a new definition of their roles and status in the household. One example of this is M, a BRAC member who works outside of the home, in a rice processing enterprise. She now controls and invests her own income, and pays for her own health care despite once having been beaten for doing so. She told one of the researchers:

My husband used to beat me up and take my money. Now he can beat me a thousand times and I won’t give him my money. I tell him. “you had better not beat me too much – I can live without you !  

Some of the women in the most empowered village had achieved a favorable redefinition of their  roles and status within their h9omes. these tended to be women who were the most successful economically, and /or whose incomes provided most of the family’s  support ( the husband’s earning were inadequate or intermittent ). This suggests that there may in fact be an association between women’s contributions t0 family support and reduced violence, but only when women’s economic contributions reach high levels and that high economic contributions are so rare that this did mot show up in the multivariate analysis. Most Grameen Bank and BRAC women have relatively modest incomes; in the survey sample only 20% were providing half or more of the family’s support. Apparently credit programs protect women against violence to some extent even though the women may not have reached the stage of economic independence that may be associated with lower violence. 

The effect of credit programs in reducing violence against women is particularly interesting because, for the most part, the programs do not deal directly with violence against women. The ethnographer in one of the study villages reported.

During my two –year stay in the village I never once heart any protest against domestic violence in the Center meetings. Grameen Bank never wants to know whether their husbands beat the women when they ask for money to pay the installments (in cases where the husband appropriates part or all of the loan money for his own use). When the Center Chief was laid up after a beating by hey husband the band staff didn’t ask her anything about it, although (surely) he could guess the reason. J, the center Chief says, “When our husbands beat us we do not tell Sir (the local Grameen staff). How can we tell Sir about this shameful thing? If he asks (what the problem is) we tell him something else. And when he hears that a member is sick he doesn’t ask any more questions.      

Interviews with credit program field staff suggest that they have an intuitive understanding of the deeply rooted connection between men’s violence against women and patriarchy. They sense that speaking out against domestic violence would be perceived as a challenge to men’s rights over their wives and thus, could  jeopardize the program’s acceptance by the community. Because of this they tend to avoid the issue, but occasionally kit is difficult for them to do so . In one case a member’s husband beat his wife while a Grameen Band meeting was in progress, in front of all of those assembled. He wanted the money she had saved to pay the loan installment for gambling. The  bank worker admonished him saying “You have no sense of decency, beating your wife in front of  us ! You must repay the money immediately!”

The same band worker described another case, in which a husband dragged his wife into another room and beat her while the credit group meeting was going on. In this case the bank worker said to the man’s father, who was sitting nearby, “ What kind of son do you have, beating his wife in front of us?  If he needs to beat her so badly lit him wait until we have gone!” 

When we discussed the Grameen Bank worker’s responses in these cases our research team was divided. Two members initially argued that the credit program staff, being male, were identifying with their own gender and at some deep level accepted the idea that men had the right to control their wives. They felt that the band staff should have gone further in defending the women. Others argued that under the circumstances this would have been foolish, that at least the man said something to embarrass the husband, that the message was “don’t beat your wife,” and that words ‘in front of   us “ were necessary to soften the challenge to the man’s authority over his wife. Another interpretation  is that intervening further might have raised suspicion of a sexual liaison between the band worker and the women. Men’s violence against women undoubtedly is a sensitive issue .It is not addressed in the orientation and   training of credit program field staff, except indirectly, insofar as the staff are told to encourage members to support one another. Lacking direct guidance and psserce8ving that attempts to intervene in domestic violence could backfire; it is not surprising that the field staff tend to avoid the issue.

 

CONCLUSION

The findings of this study draw attention to the pervasiveness of men’s violence against women in rural society in Bangladesh and suggest that along with expanding employment and other income gener- ating opportunities for women, interventions may be needed to support women who are subjected to men’s violence. Credit programs appear to reduce domestic violence be channeling resources to families through women and by organizing women into solidarity groups that meet regularly and make the women’s lives more visible. These strategies could be employed in other types of programs.                                                                                

Building on the success of their existing methods, credit programs many want to  consider more direct interventions to reduce men’s  violence against women, starting with   open discussions of the problem in group meetings, Providing assistance to those in difficulty and standing up against injustice are two of the “Sixteen Decisions”  that Grameen Band members must   memorize and are asked to commit themselves to, and BRAC also promotes these  general principles,. While both Grameen  and BRAC  can cite examples of collective confrontation  by groups of women in response to violence against  group members by their husbands, these are rare examples; collective resistance to  men’s violence could  be explicitly  encouraged to a greater extent as  specific   examples of  ways to put the  decisions into practice. Given the widespread acceptance of men’s  violence against their wives, a meaningful attempt  to intervene probably would require extensive aware-ness-raising  efforts directed at program staff and husbands and families of women in credit programs, as well as at the women themselves ( Huq, 1995) . Attempts to promote attitudinal change may  need to be reinforced with interventions such as legal aid for women . BRAC’s involvement in education and health programs could provide an opportunity to disseminate anti-violence messages in communities through various avenues and to influence the next generation through its nonformal  schools .

The fact that women may be subjected  to physical abuse by their husbands when they seek treatment for heath pr problems needs to be confronted by health and  family planning programs, even though the solution to this problem obviously  will not be simple.  Some nongovernmental organizations  in Bangladesh  are attempting to address the issue of violence against women through consciousness raising,,  legal advocacy at the national level and legal aid; Ain O Shalish, Kendra , Nijera Kori,  Nari Pokkho, Saptagram and Mahila Parishad  are a few  examples. Such  efforts to strengthen rights  and protections for women  in the legal code and to improve women’s access to the legal  system may  gradually reduce women’s  susceptibility  to men’s violence  ,if  pursued on a large scale.

The success of Bangladesh national family planning program ij radically transforming reproductive norms may provide a modes for addressing the problem of women’s social subordination, of  which violence is one aspect.In addition to providing contraceptive supplies and services on a large scale, the family planning  program had made  extensive use of mass media and interpersonal  communication to promote the small family norm . The result has been a dramatic and rapid  transformation in  attitudes and behavior  related to fertility. To a limited extent television and radio are beginning to be used by the Bangladesh  Government, with assistance from UNICEF, to promote the idea that girl children should  be treated equally to  boys in allocation of  food and education . Nongovernmental  organizations  have begun to use mass  media to condemn the institution  of  dowry and the violence against young brides that too often results from conflicts over  dowry . Expansion and sustainment  of  such  efforts in order to  produce  an impact comparable to that  of the family planning  program will require a strong  political commitment at the highest  levels of government, as well as among development  donors. For this level of commitment to take shape, further data gathering and  consciousness raising  is needed  to  reveal the extent of men’s violence  against   women, to expose the links between violence  and other aspects of women’s subordination, and to recognize the magnitude of suffering and diminishment  of human  potential that gender  based subordination entails.           

 


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