Abstract

Research on intimate partner violence (IPV) has progressed in the last decade in the fields of public health and economics, with under-explored potential for cross-fertilisation. We examine the theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches that each discipline uses to conceptualise and study IPV and offer a perspective on their relative advantages. Public health takes a broad theoretical perspective anchored in the socio-ecological framework, considering multiple and synergistic drivers of IPV, while economics focuses on bargaining models which highlight individual power and factors that shape this power. These perspectives shape empirical work, with public health examining multi-faceted interventions, risk and mediating factors, while economics focuses on causal modelling of specific economic and institutional factors and economic-based interventions. The disciplines also have differing views on measurement and ethics in primary research. We argue that efforts to understand and address IPV would benefit if the two disciplines collaborated more closely and combined the best traditions of both fields.

Highlights

  • Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a major global public health challenge with one in three women ever experiencing lifetime physical and/or sexual IPV (World Health Organization, 2021)

  • IPV research has historically been undertaken by public health or feminist scholars, conceptualising IPV as a phenomenon driven by complex socio-ecological factors and using mixed methodologies (Heise, 1998; Jewkes, 2002)

  • IPV is increasingly being studied by diverse disciplines, including economics

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Summary

Introduction

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a major global public health challenge with one in three women ever experiencing lifetime physical and/or sexual IPV (World Health Organization, 2021). Public health researchers maintain that the origins of IPV are multifaceted and grounded in the interplay of factors operating at different levels of the “social ecology.” The discipline draws on the socioecological model as a heuristic tool to organize the individual, inter­ personal, community and macro-level factors that combine to increase an individual’s risk of perpetrating or experiencing IPV (Heise, 1998).

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