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• THE ASSESSMENT OF VIOLENCE AGAINST; THE SCOURGE OF THE SOCIETY: A Study of Jalingo

Metropolis

CHAPTER ONE
Introduction
 BACKGROUND OF STUDY
 Violence against women is a fundamental human rights violation, rooted in unjust and unequal
power and gender relations and structures in our societies. These are upheld by rigid and unjust
social, economic, legal and cultural norms that determine a woman’s, often unequal, role in her
home, her community and her workplace. Violence against women is a form of gender-based
violence, which is “a harmful act or threat based on a person’s sex or gender identity. It includes
physical, sexual and psychological abuse, coercion, denial of liberty and economic deprivation
whether occurring in public or private spheres.” (CARE, 2015, p.1). Evidence has found that
communities with higher levels of violence against women share the following expressions of
gender inequality: condoning of violence against women; men’s control of decision-making and
limits to women’s independence; rigid gender roles and identities; and male peer relations that
emphasize aggression and disrespect towards women (Our Watch, 2015, p.8).
 Millions of women have died, been disabled and suffered psychological trauma as a result of this
violence. Women and their families bear the highest burden of social and economic costs,
including shame and stigma. It affects their participation in education, employment, civic life and
politics, and impedes their access and control over resources – increasing poverty and
inequality. Patriarchal institutions and systems that view violence against women as a ‘private
problem’ have meant that this violence is often made invisible, resulting in solutions being
under-funded, including by governments and private companies. But as this report shows,
governments also bear a significant burden of costs in terms of service delivery, as do
companies in lost productivity in the workplace.
 The fact that violence against women is a fundamental human rights violation is, in itself,
sufficient justification for action.
 Understanding the scourge of violence against women provides additional arguments and
evidence for why preventing and responding to violence against women should be a top priority.
This report is also, therefore, an urgent call to governments, donors and the private sector to
prioritize and make budgetary allocations to prevent and address this violation. The costs can
also be saved when violence is prevented in the first place (primary prevention). Investing in the
prevention of violence is a cost-effective approach for states: studies show, for instance, that by
investing in the effective implementation of behavioural, legal and regulatory solutions, states
will save on the cost of responding to violence (Laxminarayan et al., 2006, p.48).
 Some governments and donors are already making efforts to cost interventions as well as adopt
gender-responsive budgeting to assess how public resources are allocated and spent to tackle
violence against women. The results from these efforts provide policymakers with direction on
how resources could be best allocated and mobilized towards violence prevention.
 1.2 STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
 This study’s problem was based on, the researcher’s experiences, conversations and
observations on the happenings in families and the society at large. The family is often equated
with sanctuary, a place where individuals seek love, safety, security, and shelter. But the
evidence shows that it is also a place that imperils lives, and breeds some of the most drastic
forms of violence perpetrated against women and girls. Violence in the domestic sphere is
usually perpetrated by males who are, or who have been, in positions of trust and intimacy and
power – husbands, boyfriends, fathers, fathers-in-law, stepfathers, brothers, uncles, sons, or
other relatives. Domestic violence and intimate partner violence is in most cases violence
perpetrated by men against women. Women can also be violent, but their actions account for a
small percentage of domestic and intimate relationship violence

Violence has a profound effect on women. Beginning before birth, in some countries, with sex-selective
abortions, or at birth when female babies may be killed by parents who are desperate for a son, it
continues to affect women throughout their lives. Each year, millions of girls undergo female genital
mutilation. Female children are more likely than their brothers to be raped or sexually assaulted by
family members, by those in positions of trust or power, or by strangers. In some countries, when an
unmarried woman or adolescent is raped, she may be forced to marry her attacker, or she may be
imprisoned for committing a “criminal” act. Those women who become pregnant before marriage may
be beaten, ostracized or murdered by family members, even if the pregnancy is the result of violenc

 After marriage, the greatest risk of violence for women continues to be in their own homes
where husbands and, at times, in-laws, may assault, rape or kill them. When women become
pregnant, grow old, or suffer from mental or physical disability, they are more vulnerable to
attack. Husbands and wives do not discuss family issues but husbands take sole decisions.
Through interactions with friends and colleagues, women talk about their situations at home,
there they are commonly abused by their spouses through battering, sexual abuse, giving out
female children in marriage at the early years and depriving them neither to participate in the
decision of child marriage nor to take part in family affairs.
 Such early marriages limit education, affects young girls’ academic pursuits, the future
compromised and other opportunities often leading to early child bearing and increased health
risks. Early child bearing affects female reproductive organs and health problems such as unsafe
abortion, and obstetric fistula. Husbands take decision whether it suits the family or not. Though
most wives and children suffer the consequences of the heads of the family’s decisions. It is also
observed that violation of women at home has made women situation difficult to participate
fully in issues concerning them in the home and in the society. As such, women have no
freedom to speak for themselves because of fear of punishment from their husbands. Men think
women are meant for giving birth, taking care of the children and doing only domestic works.
 However, While the impact of physical abuse may be more ‘visible’ than psychological scarring,
repeated humiliation and insults, forced isolation, limitations on social mobility, constant threats
of violence and injury, and denial of economic resources are more subtle and insidious forms of
violence. The intangible nature of psychological abuse makes it harder to define and report,
leaving the woman in a situation where she is often made to feel mentally destabilized and
powerless.
 Jurists and human rights experts and activists have argued that the physical, sexual and
psychological abuse, sometimes with fatal outcomes, inflicted on women is comparable to
torture in both its nature and severity. It can be perpetrated intentionally, and committed for
the specific purposes of punishment, intimidation, and control of the woman’s identity and
behaviour. It takes place in situations where a woman may seem free to leave, but is held
prisoner by fear of further violence against herself and her children, or by lack of resources,
family, legal or community support. Consequently, the problem statement of the study
therefore seek to understand the scourge of violence against women in our contemporary
society most especially Jalingo Metropolis in Taraba state.

 1.3 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY

 The main objective of the study was to examine and assess the scourge of violence against
women in the society

 To examine the prevalence and nature of violence against women in Jalingo metropolis, Taraba
State.

 To identify factors responsible for violence against women in the society most especially Jalingo
metropolis in Taraba state

 To examine the effects of violence against women on family relationship in Jalingo metropolis,
Taraba State

 To examine the deprivation of women’s rights in decision making in the family relationship in
the society most especially Jalingo Metropolis, Taraba State.

 To identify measures of control in curbing the menace of violence against women in the society
most especially Jalingo metropolis in Taraba State

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