Abstract

Measuring violence against women raises methodological questions, as well as the wider question of how to understand violence and locate it in relation to a societal context. This is all the more relevant given that measurement of violence against women in the EU has made an interesting phenomenon apparent, the so-called ‘Nordic Paradox’, whereby prevalence is higher in more gender equal countries. This article examines this phenomenon by exploring a range of factors—methodological, demographic and societal—to contextualise disclosed levels of violence. The analysis makes use of a multilevel analytic approach to take into account how macro and micro levels contribute to the prevalence of violence. The intercepts are then used to illustrate how taking these into account might provide an alternative ranking of levels of violence against women in EU countries. The results show that the ‘Nordic Paradox’ disappears—and can be undone—when factors at individual and country levels are considered. We conclude that the ‘Nordic Paradox’ cannot be understood independently from a wider pattern of violence in society, and should be seen as connected and co-constituted in specific formations, domains or regimes of violence. Our results show that the use of multi-level models can provide new insights into the factors that may be related to disclosed prevalence of violence against women. This can generate a better understanding of how violence against women functions as a system, and in turn inform better policy responses.

Highlights

  • As elsewhere across the world, violence against women is a critical issue across the European Union (EU), with on average at least one in three women experiencing violence over their lifetime [1]

  • The results have shown that controlling for a range of other factors at the individual and country levels can provide an alternative ranking to that provided by the EU-wide Survey on Violence against Women, what we call undoing the ‘Nordic Paradox’

  • The results of this analysis suggest that violence against women is not independent from a wider pattern of violence in society, but connected and co-constituted in specific formations, domains or regimes of violence [3, 25, 78]

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Summary

Introduction

As elsewhere across the world, violence against women is a critical issue across the EU, with on average at least one in three women experiencing violence over their lifetime [1]. The funder had no role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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