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This volume comprehensively analyzes the determinants and consequences of intimate partner violence in India. It examines the contested relationship between empowerment and intimate partner violenceat individual and community levels. It highlights the short and long-term effects of intimate partner violence on the children of victims. The book employs up-to-date quantitative methods and is based on a recently released nationally representative database. The focus is on India, a fast-growing South Asian country with poor gender indicators. It extends the understanding of intimate partner violence to developing countries lacking poor victim support bases. It also addresses SDG5, eliminate all forms of violence against all women and girls in the public and private spheres, including trafficking and sexual and other types of exploitation. The book is essential for anyone interested in the data-based analysis of intimate partner violence and activists and policymakers seeking to reduce such violence in India.
Expands the quantitative understanding of intimate partner violence beyond developed countries Offers knowledge to support UN Sustainable Development Goal by establishing the importance of gender equality Analyses the short- and long-term effect of intimate partner violence on children of victims
Auteur
Richa Kothari is a University Grants Commission Research Scholar at the Economics Department, Presidency University. She has worked as an Assistant Professor at the BES College, Kolkata, and as a data scientist and business analyst at Evalueserve, Bengaluru. Her research interests are in the field of development economics, especially pertaining to issues of gender, education, and health. She has presented her work at several international and national conferences.
Zakir Husain is a Professor in the Economics Department at Presidency University, Kolkata. A graduate of Presidency College, he passed his Masters from Calcutta University; his Ph.D., also from Calcutta University, was on community management of natural resources. He uses econometric tools and methods to study issues related to exclusion and discrimination in gerontology, education, demography and health. He has been a faculty in the Institute of Economic Growth and the Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, a Senior Consultant in the Prime Minister's High-Level Committee to prepare reports on the status of Muslims, and a member of the West Bengal Planning Board. He has presented at several universities in Asia and Europe. He has been involved with projects funded by The World Bank, the Rosa Luxemburg Society, The International Growth Centre, Cancer Research UK, Niti Ayog, etc., as one of the Investigators.
Mousumi Dutta is a Professor in the Economics Department at Presidency University, Kolkata. She is a Gold Medalist in M.Sc. (Economics) from Calcutta University and completed her doctoral degree in "Economics of conservation of built heritage: the case of Kolkata" from the same University. She has been the Principal or Co-Investigator in projects funded by The International Growth Center, London School of Economics; Rosa Luxemburg Society, Berlin, ICSSR and UGC. Prof. Dutta has worked extensively on the built environment, health and gender issues and published in journals like Tourism Management, Journal of Cultural Heritage, Social Indicators Research, and Journal of International Development. Prof. Dutta has co-authored and co-edited books on gender, reproductive health and COVID-19. She has also presented her work at Stockholm University, Gutenberg University, Corvinus University, Leeds University, Winchester University, Liverpool University, Cardiff University and Shanghai University.
Contenu
Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. Data.- Chapter 3. Measuring empowerment.- Chapter 4. Intimate partner violence and empowerment.- Chapter 5. Understanding the geography of victimisation: A spatial analysis of forms of intimate partner violence in India.- Chapter 6. Violence as a legacy: Impact of witnessing parental violence.- Chapter 7. Violence as a bequest: Is stunting and underweight more likely among children of women facing violence?.- Chapter 8. Conclusion.