Abstract

Violence against youth is a global issue; one form of youth victimization is school corporal punishment. We use baseline assessments from a cluster randomized controlled trial to examine the prevalence of school corporal punishment, by gender, and the relationship to levels of peer violence at school, parent corporal punishment, youth food security and youth academic performance and school attendance in Pakistan. Forty homogenous public schools in the urban city of Hyderabad, Pakistan were chosen for randomization into the trial evaluating a youth violence prevention intervention. 1752 6th graders, age 11–14 years, were selected as the target population. Since schools are segregated by gender in Pakistan, data are from interviews in 20 boys’ schools and 20 girls’ schools. Overall, 91.4% of boys and 60.9% of girls reported corporal punishment at school in the previous 4 weeks and 60.3% of boys had been physically punished at home in the past 4 weeks compared to 37.1% of girls. Structural equation modeling revealed one direct pathway for both boys and girls from food insecurity to corporal punishment at school while indirect pathways were mediated by depression, the number of days missed from school and school performance and for boys also by engagement in peer violence. Exposure to corporal punishment in school and from parents differs by gender, but in both boys and girls poverty in the form of food insecurity was an important risk factor, with the result that poorer children are victimized more by adults.

Highlights

  • Using the baseline data of this 2-year RCT, this paper describes the prevalence of school corporal punishment, by gender, and associations with youth peer victimization and perpetration, corporal punishment at home and food security, and youth academic performance and attendance

  • Age of learner‡ Hunger Index‡ Number of days missed school‡ School performance‡ Parent literacy levels‡ Child attitude to physical punishment Experienced physical punishment at home Peer victimisation and perpetration None Victimisation only Any perpetration Last day missed from school was due to working at home Last day missed from school was due to working for money

  • Aggressions is closely associated with depression in adolescents [29], and we have shown elsewhere that corporal punishment at home is strongly associated with depression, as is peer violence engagement in girls [30], and our structural model shows a pathway from corporal punishment at home to corporal punishment at school mediated by engagement in peer violence

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Summary

Introduction

Corporal punishment is defined as the use of physical force with the intent to cause pain as a mode of punishment, modification of behavior or preventing the negative behavior [1]. Corporal punishment and peer violence in Pakistan expressed and information contained in it are not necessarily those of or endorsed by DFID, which can accept no responsibility for such views or information or for any reliance placed on them

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