Daniel Tuki
GIGA Working Papers | 2025
Despite growing attention being paid to the societal impacts of violent conflict, little is known about how exposure thereto shapes gender attitudes, particularly in Africa. This study addresses that gap by examining the relationship between exposure to violent con-flict and attitudes toward wife-beating using data from Rounds 7 and 9 of the Afrobarome-ter surveys, spanning 39 African countries (n ≈ 100,000). Exposure to conflict is operation-alized as the number of such incidents occurring within a 30-kilometer radius of each re-spondent’s dwelling. Attitudes toward wife-beating are assessed based on answers to a question asking whether it is ever justifiable for a man to beat his wife. Contrary to expec-tations, regression analysis reveals a robust negative association: individuals exposed to more violent conflict are significantly less likely to justify wife-beating. This relationship persists across gender-disaggregated subsamples. These findings suggest that direct or proximate experience with violence may foster greater awareness of its harms, thereby reducing normative support for interpersonal violence. Additionally, conflict-affected are-as may be more likely to host peacebuilding or gender-focused interventions that contrib-ute to attitudinal changes. By highlighting the ways in which exposure to collective vio-lence can influence individual outlooks on gender-based violence, this study contributes to broader theoretical debates on norm transformation, post-conflict reconstruction, and the global gender-security nexus.
GIGA Working Papers
344
42
German Institute for Global and Area Studies (GIGA)
Hamburg