Women's productive role and marital violence in Bangladesh
Date
1999Publisher
BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)Author
Hadi, AbdullahelMetadata
Show full item recordCitation
Hadi, A. (1999). Women’s productive role and marital violence in Bangladesh. Research Reports (1999): Social Studies, Vol – XXII, 177–200.Abstract
This study assesses the role of women's participation in productive activities in reducing the
risk of marital violence. Data were collected from villages where numerous non-government organizations
(NGOs) had micro-credit based income generating programs for the poor. Both the surveys and in-depth
interviews were used to collect information from a randomly selected sample of 500 currently married
women aged <50 years living in 70 villages in 10 regions of Bangladesh. Findings reveal that the
prevalence of marital violence such as mental torture and physical assault had negative association with
women's participation in economic activities. Situation that invoked violence against had most often been
their failure of performing expected role in the household. Women's productive roles not only improved
women's position in their household but also significantly reduced both mental torture and physical assault
against them. The paper argues that participation in productive activities has the potential to bring a
significant reduction in the risk of marital violence among women in the poor community.