In: Statistics and Probability
Survey on Domestic Violence on women and young girls within the Religion and Culture group especially in Indian country and third world
Survey on Domestic Violence on women and young girls within the Religion and Culture group especially in Indian Country and the third world:
Domestic violence against women is an age-old phenomenon. Women were always considered weak, vulnerable, and in a position to be exploited. Violence has long been accepted as something that happens to women. Cultural mores, religious practices, economic and political conditions may set the precedence for initiating and perpetuating domestic violence, but ultimately committing an act of violence is a choice that the individual makes out of a range of options.
Although one cannot underestimate the importance of macro system-level forces (such as cultural and social norms) in the etiology of gender-based violence within any country, including India, individual-level variables (such as observing violence between one's parents while growing up, absent or rejecting father, delinquent peer associations) also play important roles in the development of such violence. The gender imbalance in domestic violence is partly related to differences in physical strength and size.
Moreover, women are socialized into their gender roles in different societies throughout the world. In societies with a patriarchal power structure and rigid gender roles, women are often poorly equipped to protect themselves if their partners become violent. However, much of the disparity relates to how men-dependence and fearfulness amount to cultural disarmament. Husbands who batter wives typically feel that they are exercising a right, maintaining good order in the family and punishing their wives' delinquency - especially the wives' failure to keep their proper place