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Zimbabwean Women’s Attitudes Toward Wife-Beating and Associated Factors: A Latent Class Analysis

Title: Zimbabwean Women’s Attitudes Toward Wife-Beating and Associated Factors: A Latent Class Analysis
Authors: Annah Vimbai Bengesai; Sybert Mutereko
Source: SAGE Open, Vol 14 (2024)
Publisher Information: SAGE Publishing, 2024.
Publication Year: 2024
Collection: LCC:History of scholarship and learning. The humanities; LCC:Social Sciences
Subject Terms: History of scholarship and learning. The humanities; AZ20-999; Social Sciences
Description: This paper sought to identify distinct classes of women who endorse wife-beating and the determinants of such justification to broaden current knowledge of the correlates of intimate partner violence in Zimbabwe. We drew on survey data from the 2015 Zimbabwe Demographic and Health Survey (ZDHS) and restricted our analytical sample to 2,966 currently partnered women. To classify women’s responses into patterns of tolerant attitudes, we used latent class analysis, an unsupervised classification method that helps identify heterogeneity in a population using observable variables. The data supported a three-class solution characterized by the following probabilities: class 1, high tolerance (6%); class 2, moderate tolerance (26%); and class 3, low tolerance (66%). The results from the regression analysis suggest that older age, reading a newspaper frequently, and having more than primary education were negatively associated with membership in the moderate and high tolerance classes. Women who made joint decisions or had no say in their healthcare issues were more likely to belong to the moderate and high tolerance classes. In other words, tolerant attitudes toward wife-beating were negatively associated with personal empowerment. Therefore, interventions that increase personal empowerment in the form of education and access to media might be needed to redress the endemic acceptance of wife-beating in Zimbabwe. At the same time, gender role transformative interventions are required to challenge patriarchal thinking, which denies women decision-making autonomy and perpetuates attitudes that encourage marital violence.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
ISSN: 2158-2440
Relation: https://doaj.org/toc/2158-2440
DOI: 10.1177/21582440241257603
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/ecf9cf264e2f404c844aebd96ef4ee38
Accession Number: edsdoj.f9cf264e2f404c844aebd96ef4ee38
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals