Abstract

This study explored the patterns of economic abuse among working married women from rural and urban areas in Jordan, and identified their experiences with other abuses interconnected with economic abuse, including psychological, emotional, and physical abuse and harassment. A quantitative research approach using a descriptive comparative design was employed. The findings indicated that 55.5% of urban and 44.5% of rural women have encountered spousal economic abuse in two ways: (1) controlling their economic resources and managing their financial decisions and (2) exploiting their economic resources. Economic abuse was found to be intertwined with other forms of abuse; women who faced economic abuse also endured primarily emotional and psychological abuse, followed by physical abuse and harassment, as tactics to reinforce economic abuse and maintain control over them. The most common form of psychological abuse was being made to feel frustrated and neglected when requesting emotional support, while emotional abuse was typified by resentment and being told they are inadequate. Physical abuse included partners shaking, slapping, or throwing objects at them. Both rural and urban women reported being harassed at their workplace by their partners’ repeated phone calls. In general, urban women faced more economic and other forms of abuse than rural women, especially emotional and physical abuse.

Highlights

  • Women’s economic abuse has developed into a pandemic, threatening the lives of women and girls globally (Tavares and Wodon, 2018)

  • This study explored the prevalence and patterns of economic abuse among working married women by comparing rural and urban women’s experiences and identifies other abuse associated with economic abuse experienced by both rural and urban women

  • This study first uncovered the types of economic abuse faced by rural and urban women, and compared the relationship between economic and interconnected abuse for rural and urban women

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Summary

Introduction

Women’s economic abuse has developed into a pandemic, threatening the lives of women and girls globally (Tavares and Wodon, 2018). Economic abuse is defined as an intentional pattern of control in which individuals interfere with their partner’s ability to acquire, use, and maintain economic resources (Postmus et al, 2018), and forces one person to depend financially on the other (Adams et al, 2008; Sanders and Schnabel, 2006) This includes one person’s control and influence over money and property, their partner’s education, and work (Anitha, 2019), preventing their partner from accessing work, depriving them of control over their economic resources, and restraining their freedom to decide how to spend and earn their resources, as well as discrimination in pay and job promotions, which threatens their economic stability (Adams et al, 2008). Economic abuse is one form of invisible partner abuse (Postmus et al, 2018)

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