Title: Addressing GenderBased Violence: A Critical Review of Interventions
1Addressing Gender-Based Violence A Critical
Review of Interventions
- Andrew Morrison
- Gender and Development Group (PRMGE)
- World Bank
- September 30, 2008
2Outline
- Risk factors
- Sectoral good practices
- Health
- Education prevention
control - Justice
- Urban development
- Beyond sectoral approaches
- Conclusionspolicy recommendations
3Risk factors for violence occur at many levels
Community
Relationship
Society
Individual
SourceHeise 1998
4Correlates of violence against women
5Health sector
6A graduated response to violence
- First, do no harm
- Decide on how to screen for violence
- Undertake explicit efforts to address abuse
- Inside health institutions
- Via referrals
7Identifying abused women what is the best
strategy?
- Ask all women about abuse at all visits
- Ask only when there are signs of violence
- Screen routinely in strategic programs
(emergency, reproductive health, mental health,
etc.)
8Health sector plans and protocols should
- Avoid secondary victimization (do no harm)
- Specify policy/instruments for screening
- Offer free consultations/treatment for victims
- Expedite referrals among health institutions
- Enhance coordination between clinics/hospitals
and social services/criminal justice - Increase focus on prevention using public health
approaches
9 10Alarming statistics from Africa
- Six country study Between 16 and 47 of girls
in primary and secondary schools report sexual
abuse or harassment - Botswana 20 of students pressured by teachers
for sex - Cameroon 8 of all sexual abuse of girls was
accounted for by teachers - South Africa 37.7 of rape victims identified
teacher or principal as the rapist - South Africa Girls more likely to be assaulted
by male classmates than teachers
Sources Leach (2003) and Medical Research
Council, 2000
11but little information from LAC
- To our knowledge, only two studies
- Brazil 8 of students (5th to 8th grade) had
witnessed sexual violence within school - Ecuador 22 of adolescent girls reported being
sexually abused in school (one-school survey) - No national policies or regulations on harassment
or sexual abuse in schools
Sources Abramovay and Franco, 2004 Leon, 1994
12Why does VAW in schools matter?
- Impact on girls school attendance
- Impact on girls performance in school
- Sexual and reproductive health issues
- Boys behavior may set lifelong pattern of abuse
and predation - STDs and AIDS
13Elements of a policy response in education
- Measure and document levels of violence against
girls in schools - Reform laws and policies of the education sector
- Reform institutions of the education sectors
14 15Strengthening access to justice
- Ratification of international conventions
- Improving institutional response of police,
judiciary, forensic medicine and legal aid - Womens police stations
- Protective/restraining orders civil remedies
- Batterers treatment programs
16- Multi-sectoral
- approaches
17Beyond sectoral approaches.
- One-stop shops
- National plans for prevention of violence against
women - Integration into national crime prevention
strategies
18Conclusions Recommendations
- Dearth of high-quality evaluations
- No single intervention can address all important
risk factors need to intervene at different
levelsindividual, community, institutional, etc. - Some risk factors can be addressed quickly and at
relatively low cost - There is systematic underinvestment in prevention
programs that confront underlying attitudes and
beliefs that promote violence
19Conclusions Recommendations
- One-stop shops are desirable, but costly and most
appropriate for urban areas of middle-income
countries - Some interventions from developed countries are
of questionable efficacy and inappropriate for
developing countries mandatory reporting by
health sector, batterer treatment programs,
shelters