The IRMA Community
Newsletters
Research IRM
Click a keyword to search titles using our InfoSci-OnDemand powered search:
|
Economic Drivers of Domestic Violence among Women: A Case Study of Ghana
Abstract
Violence against women seems to be more of an economic than a sociological problem. In Ghana, no study has investigated the economic causes of domestic violence against women. The chapter seeks to investigate the economic factors that are likely to drive domestic violence among married couples. The study uses a survey of 260 married women from selected communities around the University of Cape Coast. Due to the nature of the measurement of domestic violence, the study adopts the binary logit model to estimate the key economic variables that affect the likelihood of being subjected to domestic violence. Average income, property ownership, economic activities, and their interactions seem to drive domestic violence after controlling for some household covariates. It is found that income and a combination of being economically engaged and owning an asset significantly affected domestic violence at their desired level of significance. Stemming from this, the authors call on the appropriate authorities to make credit facilities available to women to enable them to be economically engaged. Empowering women through the provision of micro-credit facilities has the potential to reduce the economic dimensions of domestic violence.
Related Content
Jun Sung Hong, Alberto Valido, Luz E. Robinson.
© 2024.
26 pages.
|
Adrijana GrmuĊĦa, Jun Sung Hong.
© 2024.
48 pages.
|
Justin J. Joseph, N. Alexander Aguado, Christoper W. Purser.
© 2024.
30 pages.
|
Sivani Pegadraju, Zidan Kachhi.
© 2024.
26 pages.
|
Ramona Sue McNeal, Susan M. Kunkle, Lisa Dotterweich Bryan, Mary Schmeida.
© 2024.
24 pages.
|
Angela R. Staton, Tammy Gilligan, Michele Kielty.
© 2024.
22 pages.
|
Ranjit Singha, Surjit Singha, Alphonsa Diana Haokip, Shruti Jose, V. Muthu Ruben.
© 2024.
14 pages.
|
|
|