Abstract

Women's lives and their bodies have been the unacknowledged casualties of men for too long. As a result of violence perpetrated against them, their productivity in workplaces have decreased over time. Understanding that productivity improvement is a key objective for industries, the thrust of the study is, therefore, to evaluate, from a sociological perspective, the consequences of violence on women's productivity in contemporary Nigerian society. A sample 595 respondents was selected through the multistage sampling techniques amongst working class women. The questionnaire was subjected to face and content validation by experts from gender and women studies. Chi-square was adopted to test the hypotheses at 0.05 levels of significance. Findings reveal that violence against women disrupts women's lives, destroys their health, undermines their confidence, and takes away their psychological sense of esteem, as well as undermines their full participation in social life. Secondly, the study show that women make several medical visits every year to treat injuries resulting from assaults by spouse thereby limiting the number of hours spent in the office. Essentially, violence against women lessens the woman's inability to work and promote productivity. Based on this, the study concludes that since women represent an important population group in Nigeria, there is an urgent need to address marital violence against them, particularly those in the formal sector of the economy because they make meaningful contributions to the overall labour force and general societal well-being of all and sundry. In view of this, the study recommends, amongst others, that government through state and non-state actions should ensure the strict enforcement of laws that protect women's rights, as well as deter their partners from subjecting them to violence. In addition, educational and religious institutions should re-orientate men to be more accommodating in their relationship with their women partners on the ills associated with marital violence particularly wife abuse, with a view to getting them unlearn such violent behaviours. Finally, there is a need for advocacy and concerted action that will involve the educational, health, civil and religious sectors of the society to evolve sustainable structures that will empower women and provide support to enable victims to react appropriately to violence.

Highlights

  • One of the most enveloping infringements of human rights in all developing societies, Nigeria is the violence perpetrated by a cherished spouse against the other who was once found irresistible

  • The wave of brutality against women sexual, psychological, and socio-economic has become extensive across the Nigerian society than ever before, not necessarily because the evils inherent in the act are not despicable but because Nigeria is a patriarchal society where women are located in the other room

  • The broad objective of this study is to examine the issue of marital violence and how it affects the labour productivity of women outside the home

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most enveloping infringements of human rights in all developing societies, Nigeria is the violence perpetrated by a cherished spouse against the other who was once found irresistible. Violence has absconded from the home as if it were human and migrated into workplaces lowering productivity as never before. Violence against women is a major threat to economic productivity which is measured as a ratio of outputs to inputs. Labour productivity is the result of workers’ ability to increase yield in the absence of hostile environment. Since there is no exceptional method for determining productivity in organizations in order to ascertain the level of performance, improving performance and increasing productivity requires violence free environment

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