Title: The Measurement of Violence Against Women (VAW)
1The Measurement of Violence Against Women (VAW)
- Angela Me
- UNECE Statistics Division
2Beijing Platform for Action
- VAW is an obstacle to the achievement of the
objectives of equality, development and peace. - VAW violates and impairs or nullifies the
enjoyment by women of their human rights and
fundamental freedoms. - VAW is a violation of human rights
3How VAW can be defined?
- General Assembly
- Any act of gender-based violence that results
in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual
or psychological harm or suffering to women,
including threats of such acts, coercion or
arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether
occurring in public or in private life
4How VAW can be defined?
- It includes a broad range of acts
- Physical, sexual and psychological violence
occurring in the family (including battering,
sexual abuse of female children, dowry-related
violence, marital rape) - Physical, sexual and psychological violence
occurring within the general community (including
rape, sexual abuse, sexual harassment,
trafficking in women and forced prostitution) - Physical, sexual and psychological violence
perpetrated or condoned by the State, wherever it
occurs
5How VAW can be measured?
Traditional sources
Police Statistics Types of crimes (VAW), information on victims and offenders and their relationship Only reported crimes Only physical and sexual
Homicide Statistics Information on victims and offenders and their relationship Only physical and sexual
Court statistics Cases of VAW processed, conviction, Only reported crimes Only physical and sexual
6How VAW can be measured?
- Shortcoming of traditional sources
- Coverage
- They do not cover all form of VAW (psychological)
- They cover ONLY REPORTED crimes
- This is a limitation particularly for domestic
violence (among the most common form of VAW)
7Use of criminal justice and social services by
female victims of spousal violence
Source Johnson, 1999 Canadian General Social
Survey on Victimization, Statistics Canada
8How VAW can be measured?
- Data on VAW based on police records
- Provide a biased view
- Give the wrong message for advocacy and policy
making
9Other existing sources?
- Service-based Data
- Health records
- Welfare services
- Shelters
- Support services for survivors of violence
- Women lawyers associations
10Other existing sources?
- Service-based Data
- Can provide a valuable source to show the limited
number of cases covered by police records for
example - Can be used to monitor women that come forward
for help - Can provide case studies to study the root causes
of violence and the circumstances - Can help to estimate the cost to society to
responding to VAW - Can be used to estimate the need for training
among service providers
11Other existing sources?
- HOWEVER ..Service-based Data
- They can NOT be used to measure the prevalence of
violence in a country or community - They suffer the same problem of undercounting
(not all women report to services and those that
do report tend to be the most seriously injured)
12Other existing sources?
- Health Services
- Potentially they could become a more effective
source of data by increasing disclosure through
routine enquiry about violence and developing
capacity to record, analyze and report the data
on VAW - Obligatory reporting of VAW by health workers?
- The effectiveness of these two issues is still
under debate
13Population-based Sample Surveys
- Reach women to ask about their experience on VAW
- They reflect actual occurrences of victimization
rather than what is reported to officials - They are the MOST RELIABLE method for collecting
information on the extend of VAW
14Population-based Sample Surveys
- Examples of National Surveys carried out within
the framework of official statistics - Canada, Australia, Finland, France, United
States, Italy - Examples of International Surveys
- WHO Multi-Country Study, International Violence
against Women Surveys (IVAWS)
15Ad-hoc Module in Surveys
- An ad-hoc module on VAW could be included in
on-going surveys under the following conditions - A full instrument has to be added (not only a
limited number of questions) - The safety of the women is not compromised
- The on-going survey should deal with similar
topics (health, victimization)
16Ad-hoc Module in Surveys
- Examples
- National Surveys Canada, UK, USA
- International Surveys Demographic and Health
Survey Module, MICS Module (only to measure
attitudes over VAW)
17Percentages of all women and currently married
women (age 15-49) reporting violence from
DHSSource Kishor, DHS
Country By anyone ever Spousal violence Spousal violence
Country By anyone ever Ever Past year
Cambodia 23 18 15
Colombia 41 44 -
Dom. Rep. 17 22 11
Egypt 35 34 13
Haiti 35 29 21
India 21 19 10
Kenya 49 47 28
Nicaragua 33 30 13
Peru 53 42 -
Zambia 59 48 27
18Considerations in planning VAW Surveys
- What type of violence to cover
- Intimate partner violence
- Sexual abuse and rape
- Incest
- Emotional abuse
- Child abuse
- Abuse of domestic workers
- Violence by members of the extended family
- Economic violence
- Stalking
- What type of violence to cover
- Intimate partner violence
- Sexual abuse and rape
- Incest
- Emotional abuse
- Child abuse
- Abuse of domestic workers
- Violence by members of the extended family
- Economic violence
- Stalking
- Important to define what acts are considered
violence
19Considerations in planning and use VAW Surveys
- How to ask women about their experience with
violence (questionnaire design) - Single direct questions or multiple behaviorally
specific questions (Have you ever been slapped,
kicked, or beaten?). Behavior-based questions
are considered more effective. Important to avoid
words such as rape, abuse - Reference period of victimization
- Lifetime (used particularly for rape and sexual
abuse) - Previous 5 years, previous 12 months, previous 6
months - The shorter the period, the more accurate are the
data
20Considerations in planning and use VAW Surveys
- Reference population
- 15-49
- 15 or 18 years and plus
- Only married or with partner
- Some studies cover men as well
- What to collect
- Perpetrators (relationship with the victimized
woman) - Injuries (very difficult to standardize it)
21Considerations in planning and use VAW Surveys
- What to report
- Prevalence (example percent of women 15-49 who
were victimized in the previous 12 months) - Severity (Number of beating by 1,000 women 15-49)
- The Questionnaire needs to be properly tested
22Considerations in planning and use VAW Surveys
- Safety of women at first
- Protect confidentiality of the data
- During the interview
- In the storage and dissemination of the data
- Specialized training of interviewers
- Technical
- Gender-sensitization
- Emotional (dealing with sensitive issues)
- Select proper women interviewers
- Filed staff should be trained to refer women
requesting assistance to available sources of
support
23Considerations in planning and use VAW Surveys
- Safety of women at first
- WHO Ethical and Safety Guidelines for Researching
Domestic Violence against Women