A Drop of Love? Rainfall Shocks and Spousal Abuse: Evidence from Rural Peru
Year | : | 2020 |
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Author/s | : | Juan Jose Diaz, Víctor Saldarriaga |
Area/s | : | Ethnicity, gender and citizenship, Methodologies for research and evaluation of policy and programmes, Poverty and equality, Health and nutrition |
Díaz, J. & Saldarriaga, V (2020). A Drop of Love? Rainfall Shocks and Spousal Abuse: Evidence from Rural Peru. SSRN
The authors investigate whether the exposure to rainfall shocks affects the experience of physical intimate partner violence by women in rural areas of the Peruvian Andes. Using data from the Demographic and Health Surveys over the period 2005-2014, they track changes in women’s experience of physical IPV following the exposure to rainfall shocks during the cropping season. Results indicate that the prevalence of physical intimate partner violence increases by 65 percent after the occurrence of events of drought, but not flood, during the cropping season. Researchers argue, based on additional results, that this effect is mediated by increased poverty-related stress and reduced female empowerment caused by rainfall shocks.