Drivers of Male Perpetration of Family and Intimate Partner Violence in Cape Town

50 Pages Posted: 24 Oct 2011

See all articles by Kai M. Thaler

Kai M. Thaler

University of California, Santa Barbara

Date Written: August 24, 2011

Abstract

This paper examines the drivers of male perpetration of violence against adult family members and intimate partners in Cape Town, South Africa. Data on 1,369 young men from the Cape Area Panel Study are analyzed and significant causal pathways are examined for the full sample and for disaggregated samples of African and coloured respondents. Socioeconomic disadvantage plays a role in a culture of patriarchal violence, but its effects are largely mediated by behavioural factors such as routine alcohol consumption and having concurrent sexual partners, and norms of acceptance of violence against women. Different factors emerge as predictors of violence in the African and coloured samples. The findings of the quantitative analysis are illustrated with evidence from 45 qualitative interviews that address the role of violence in family and gender relations in Cape Town. Economic interventions are of uncertain efficacy given South Africa‘s difficulties since the end of apartheid in improving economic opportunities for the poor; thus interventions targeting norms and behaviour hold the most promise for reducing family and intimate partner violence in the near term.

Keywords: violence, capetown, male violence, family, interventions

Suggested Citation

Thaler, Kai Massey, Drivers of Male Perpetration of Family and Intimate Partner Violence in Cape Town (August 24, 2011). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1948473 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1948473

Kai Massey Thaler (Contact Author)

University of California, Santa Barbara ( email )

South Hall 5504
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
United States

HOME PAGE: http://kaithaler.com

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