Volume 2015, Issue 1 458654
Research Article
Open Access

The Nexus between Child Marriage and Women Empowerment with Physical Violence in Two Culturally Distinct States of India

Jayakant Singh

Corresponding Author

Jayakant Singh

School of Health Systems Studies, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai 400088, India tiss.edu

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Enu Anand

Enu Anand

International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai 400088, India iipsindia.org

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First published: 07 December 2015
Citations: 3
Academic Editor: Sally Guttmacher

Abstract

Summary. We investigated the relationship between child marriage among young women and their level of empowerment with spousal physical violence in two culturally distinct states of India (Bihar and Tamil Nadu) using nationally representative survey data. Empowerment index was calculated taking into account parameters such as mobility, economic independence, and decision-making power of a woman using Principal Component Analysis method. Lower level of women empowerment was significantly associated with physical violence in Tamil Nadu (OR = 2.38, p < 0.01) whereas marriage before the age of 15 was associated with physical violence in Bihar (OR = 3.27, p < 0.001). The mean age at marriage was low among women who reported physical violence as compared to those who did not report physical violence across Bihar and Tamil Nadu and at all India level. Although the majority of the women in Tamil Nadu justified wife beating and witnessed father beating mother as compared to the women from Bihar, however, they were less likely to report physical violence than women from Bihar. Factors contributing to physical violence are distinct in Bihar and Tamil Nadu. Culture specific intervention may be considered while planning intervention strategies to curb spousal violence against women.

1. Introduction

UNICEF defines child marriage as any marriage that occurs before the age of 18 for girls. A recent study by UNICEF [1] reveals alarming facts about child marriage worldwide: an estimated number of more than 720 million girls currently living were married before the age of 18; one in three child marriages occurred before the age of 15; South Asia alone is home to nearly half of all the child marriages in the world (42%); and most shockingly, every third child marriage in the world takes place in India. National Population Policy 2000 [2], National Youth Policy 2003 [3], and the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act 2006 [4] are few of the most recent policies and laws formed in India to prevent child marriage but have not been very effective so far in reduction of child marriage.

Evidence suggests that early marriage limits knowledge, skills, resources, mobility, autonomy, and social support of young girls and those who lack this are extremely vulnerable to physical and sexual violence and psychological and economic abuse [5, 6]. Early marriage leads to curtailment of school education [5]. The chance of receiving quality education is a distant reality for the child bride and higher levels of dropout from the school are a very common phenomenon [5]. Girls who are married at an early age are also likely to report an early pregnancy with considerable exposure to the risk of violence [6]. Negative consequences of child marriage on the physical health and mental wellbeing of the child bride are vividly demonstrated [5, 710]. The vulnerability of child bride in relation to physical abuse in different cultural contexts has however not received adequate attention. Little work that has focused on India [1116] however suggested that there is an increased risk of Intimate Partner Violence among child brides. A few studies have acknowledged lack of autonomy in women to be a risk factor associated with higher levels of violence within marriage [5, 17, 18]. While the situation of child bride is somewhat documented in India, evidence on the ways in which child bride may be a risk factor for physical violence in culture specific context is limited [19]. In India, being a large country with diverse culture and tradition, the causes of physical violence may vary from state to state.

How child marriage and women empowerment are related to the risk of physical violence is the main objective of this paper. The pattern and prevalence of physical violence in relation to women empowerment and child marriage from two culturally distinct states with high prevalence of physical violence are the broader scope of the study. Bihar and Tamil Nadu are the two states selected in this study for the following reasons: these two states are socioculturally distinct, located in the two different spectrums of India. Bihar is in the northern part of India whereas Tamil Nadu is in the southern part of India. Kinship system in India is not homogeneous across states. It also varies across different castes and strata within a geographical region. Although such variation is persistent, there is a clear north and south divide in the Indian kinship structure. Dyson and Moore (1983) have pointed out three key differences between the north Indian and south Indian system [20]: in north India, the spouses are unrelated and they are not from the same village indicating marriage rules to be exogamic in nature. Secondly, males cooperate with other adult males within blood relation for any kind of help. And finally, women do not inherit property from their parents. Socially, the wife givers are inferiors to the wife takers and often the women do not have a choice in the process of mate selection in north India. In contrast, often the preferred form of marriage is cross-cousin marriage in south India. Males in south India are also likely to engage in relation and mutual support with that of the wife’s family as much as with their own blood relation. Women in south India can inherit property from their parents. In south Indian context, women are more likely to be married to a known person in contrast to their north Indian counterpart. Conversely, the behaviour of women in the north Indian society is more likely to be rigidly observed whereas in south India, the woman may have already known the in-law’s family members. Interestingly, there is greater freedom in the case of the women in south India in terms of keeping relation with their natal home as opposed to the north Indian women. In fact, the majority of the newly married couples are encouraged to live in an independent nuclear family in south India unlike in north India. Karve (1953) expressed that the women in the south enjoyed greater freedom and a higher social status as compared to women in north India [21].

Women autonomy and mobility indicators observed in NFHS-3 (National Family Health Survey) [11] portrayed somewhat better condition of women in Tamil Nadu than in Bihar. The powerlessness among females is understood to be more acute in north India as compared to south India [14]. In addition, Tamil Nadu also performed better than Bihar in some of the health and development indicators. For example, female literacy rate was 73.86 in Tamil Nadu versus 53.33 in Bihar; sex ratio was 995 in Tamil Nadu versus 916 in Bihar; total fertility rate was 1.7 in Tamil Nadu versus 3.6 in Bihar; infant mortality rate in Bihar was twice that of Tamil Nadu; and maternal mortality rate in Bihar was more than the double compared to Tamil Nadu [2224]. Although the sociocultural contexts of these two states are different, prevalence of physical violence is the highest in these states. As per NFHS-3, physical violence among the young married women aged 20–24 was the highest in Bihar (45.7%) from among the northern Indian states and it was the highest in Tamil Nadu (26.1%) from among the southern Indian states. Such discrepancies are curious as these states are not only culturally different but are in different stages of socioeconomic and demographic fronts. We therefore examined whether factors such as child marriage and women empowerment are related to physical violence.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Ethical Statement

The National Family Health Survey (NFHS) was conducted under the supervision of the International Institute for Population Sciences (IIPS), Mumbai, India. The ORC Macro institutional review board approved the data collection procedures. Formal consent was obtained from the respondents before conducting interview. The study is based on anonymous public use datasets without any identification information of the survey participants. Survey data is available upon request.

2.2. Data

We used data from a nationally representative cross-sectional survey in India. The National Family Health Survey (NFHS-3) conducted in 2005-06 is a similar version to Demographic Health Survey conducted in other low and middle income countries. In this survey, all women in the age group 15–49 were eligible as survey participants. The domestic violence module was however administered only to one eligible woman per household when her privacy was ensured. Sampling frame was drawn from the 2001 Census of India. A list of villages for the rural area and a list of wards from urban area were considered as sampling frame. Further, the sample was stratified by various demographic characteristics. The interviews were carried out by female investigators to encourage openness on sensitive topics such as violence. More details about the survey design can be found elsewhere [11]. The total sample size for India, Bihar, and Tamil Nadu was 10514, 373, and 523, respectively, after restricting the analysis to currently married women aged 20–24 in order to record the experiences of recently married women.

2.3. Measures

The key outcome variable was experience of physical violence in the last 12 months preceding the survey. All currently married women administered with the domestic violence module were asked a series of questions on experience of physical and sexual violence and emotional violence. A woman was considered to have experienced physical spousal violence if she responded yes to any of the seven questions: that her husband ever slapped her; twisted her arm or pulled her hair; pushed or shook her or threw something at her; punched her with his fist or with something that could hurt her; kicked her, dragged her, or beat her up; tried to choke her or burn her on purpose; threatened or attacked her with a knife, gun, or any other weapon. These sets of questions were based on revised Conflict Tactics Scale [25].

2.4. Covariates

The predictor variables considered in the study included age at marriage (child marriage and adult marriage). Marriage before the age of 18 was considered as child marriage as 18 is the legal age for marriage for girls in India. Further child marriage is bifurcated into marriage before the age of 15 and marriage between 15 and 17 years of age, in order to understand experiences of those child brides who were very young at the time of their marriage. Women empowerment index was computed using a set of questions that measured women’s mobility, financial independence, and decision-making power in the household: whether a woman ever worked in the last 12 months and earned in cash, whether she had any bank account or savings, whether she had final say on own health care, final say on making large household purchases, final say on making household purchases for daily needs, final say on visits to family or relatives, and final say on deciding what to do with money husband earns, and whether a woman was allowed to go to market alone, allowed to go to the health facility alone, and allowed to go to places outside the village/community alone. Empowerment index was computed using Principal Component Analysis. Cronbach’s alpha was calculated through reliability analysis to check the internal consistency of the variables selected for empowerment index [26]. The alpha coefficient for the 10 variables for empowerment score was 0.755 suggesting the elements having a good internal consistency.

Age at marriage and women empowerment index were employed as two key predictor variables. Other covariates described as risk factors [12, 16, 2729] were also used to control in regression analysis. These included age difference between husband and wife, ever witnessing violence between mother and father, husband’s alcohol use, household structure, justifying wife beating if she goes out without telling husband, neglecting the house or children, arguing with husband, refusing to have sex with husband, not cooking food properly, husband suspecting her of being unfaithful; or her showing disrespect for the in-laws. Socioeconomic variables such as educational level of the woman, husband’s level of education, occupation of the woman, occupation of the husband, wealth index, place of residence, religion of the woman, and caste of the women are shown in bivariate analysis and controlled in the regression model.

2.5. Data Analysis

Univariate, bivariate, and multivariate techniques are used in the study to analyze data. Effect of age at marriage and women empowerment was tested in the logistic regression model with other covariates mentioned above. Separate domestic violence weights were used to adjust for sampling variation in the analysis. National domestic violence weight was employed when analysis was carried out at the national level and state domestic violence weight was employed whenever analysis was carried out at the state level. The analysis was restricted to currently married women in the age group of 20–24 to examine more recent child marriage practice and its association with physical violence. Data analysis was performed using IBM SPSS 22.

3. Results

Table 1 presents the unweighted frequency distribution of key variables considered in the study. The prevalence of physical violence and the distribution of age at marriage and level of women empowerment in India, Bihar, and Tamil Nadu are shown in this table. Prevalence of physical violence as well as child marriage was higher in Bihar as compared to Tamil Nadu. Higher levels of women empowerment were observed in Tamil Nadu as compared to Bihar.

Table 1. Frequency distribution of key variables (unweighted).
Characteristics India Bihar Tamil Nadu
Age at marriage
 Married before the age of 15 26.9 39.1 14.9
 Married in the age from 15 to 17 27.4 29.5 23.7
 Married after the age of 18 45.6 31.4 61.4
Level of women empowerment
 Low 43.6 19.0
 Medium 31.7 40.4
 High 24.9 40.6
% of women who experienced physical violence in the last 12 months 21.7 46.6 30.6
Total (N) 10514 373 523
  • Women empowerment index was calculated using PCA; all the scores were divided into three equal parts; therefore, the cell is left blank.

Profile of the respondents (Table 2) reflected a few similar and distinct conditions of women in two different parts of India. The respondents from Tamil Nadu were better educated and were more likely to work for wages than the women from Bihar. The characteristics of their partner also demonstrated somewhat similar picture. The majority of the women in both states were married for more than 5 years at the time of survey. Nuclear family households were more common in Tamil Nadu whereas joint family was the dominant form of household in Bihar. The majority of the respondents in Tamil Nadu were from urban area (53%) and belonged to middle wealth index group (64%). On the contrary, the majority of the respondents from Bihar were from low wealth index group (54%) and were from rural area (65%). A somewhat different picture emerged with regard to responses pertaining to whether respondent witnessed father beating mother and on responses related to justification provided for wife beating in both states. The majority of the respondents in Tamil Nadu considered wife beating a justifiable form of behaviour (67%) as compared to the respondents from Bihar (54%). Similarly, higher percentage of the respondents in Tamil Nadu witnessed their father beating mother (39%) as compared to the respondents from Bihar (25%).

Table 2. Profile of the respondents in the age group 20–24 and their partner, NFHS-3 2006-07, India.
Background characteristics India Bihar Tamil Nadu
Witnessed father beating mother
 No 75.5 66.1 57.6
 Yes 18.6 24.5 39.4
 Do not know 5.8 9.4 3.1
Wife beating justified
 Not justified 44.9 46.2 32.8
 Justified any one reason 55.1 53.8 67.2
Husband consuming alcohol
 No 66.6 60.1 62
 Yes 33.4 39.9 38
Educational level of respondent
 No education 33.8 58.7 13.6
 Primary 15.8 12.6 18.5
 Secondary 45.1 26.8 56
 Higher 5.4 1.9 11.9
Husband’s education
 No education 20.1 34.6 12
 Primary 15.0 11.8 18.4
 Secondary 53.5 42.4 57.7
 Higher 10.8 10.2 11.9
 Do not know 0.7 1.1
Occupation of the respondent
 Not working 69.4 79.6 68.6
 Agricultural 18.7 15.5 13.2
 Nonagricultural 4.6 2.4 6.7
 Manual labor 7.3 2.4 11.5
Husband’s occupation
 Not working 1.1 2.7 0.2
 Agricultural 24.6 21.7 17.6
 Nonagricultural 30.6 31.9 23.5
 Manual labor 43.6 43.7 58.7
Spousal age difference
 Less than 5 years 41.9 40.2 35
 5 to 9 years 41.7 44.5 45.5
 10 and above 16.4 15.3 19.5
Place of residence
 Urban 39.4 35.1 53.5
 Rural 60.6 64.9 46.5
Household structure
 Nuclear 46.4 43.3 61.6
 Nonnuclear 53.6 56.7 38.4
Household wealth
 Poor (40) 34.4 54.4 19.5
 Middle (20) 46.6 33.2 64.2
 Rich (40) 19.0 12.3 16.3
Caste/tribe
 SC/ST 33.2 15.0 31.2
 Others 66.8 85.0 68.8
Religion
 Hindu 74.8 80.4 88.9
 Muslim 14.4 19.3 5
 Others 10.9 0.3 6.1
Total (N) 10514 373 523

The results from the bivariate analysis (Table 3) highlighted the notion that physical violence was significantly higher among child brides. This is persistent in Tamil Nadu where more than half of the child brides who got married before the age of 15 experienced physical violence during the last one year preceding the survey. One in three who got married within the age of 15–17 experienced physical violence in Tamil Nadu. Although the corresponding figure for Bihar is much higher, the difference is not statistically significant. Physical violence decreased significantly as the age at marriage increased in Tamil Nadu and at all India level. Bivariate results of women empowerment index and physical violence did not show any statistical significance for both states; however, the result was significant at all India level. The experience of physical violence did not change much with the level of women empowerment index. Physical violence ranged from 22 percent to 25 percent among women in high empowerment index and middle empowerment index groups at India level.

Table 3. Percentage of women in the age group 20–24 who experienced physical violence in the last 12 months, NFHS-3 2006-07, India.
Background characteristics India Bihar Tamil Nadu
Age at marriage ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗
 Before the age of 15 30.4 2830 44.1 146 52.4 78
 Between 15 and 17 26.8 2885 52.2 110 32.0 124
 After the age of 18 16.7 4799 41.0 117 18.3 321
Women empowerment index ∗∗∗
 Low 23.3 3496 40.9 161 24.5 99
 Middle 25.2 3489 55.9 116 26.9 211
 High 21.9 3486 41.6 92 26.1 212
Witnessed father beating mother ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗
 No 18.7 7931 40.5 246 17.8 301
 Yes 41.6 1958 67.2 91 40.9 206
 Do not know 26.9 611 36.4 35 15.0 16
Wife beating justified ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗ ∗∗
 Not justified 18.7 4492 31.3 166 18.7 163
 Justified any one reason 27.5 5507 58.1 193 31.3 334
Husband consuming alcohol ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗
 No 18.2 6993 34.3 224 18.6 324
 Yes 37.6 3511 65.4 149 41.1 199
Educational level of respondent ∗∗∗ ∗∗ ∗∗∗
 No education 31.1 3552 53.2 219 27.5 71
 Primary 27.6 1658 37.3 47 41.3 97
 Secondary 17.3 4739 32.4 100 25.2 293
 Higher 5.5 565 31.7 7 10.4 62
Husband’s education ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗
 No education 34.8 2105 60.9 129 35.6 63
 Primary 31.0 1572 50.5 44 32.3 96
 Secondary 19.6 5613 40.1 158 25.1 302
 Higher 10.4 1132 13.3 38 12.9 62
 Do not know 23.0 71 4.5 4 0.0 0
Occupation of the respondent ∗∗∗ ∗∗ ∗∗∗
 Not working 21.0 7293 42.0 297 20.5 359
 Agricultural 30.1 1967 58.5 58 33.9 69
 Nonagricultural 19.8 482 11.9 9 22.0 35
 Manual labour 30.2 767 88.4 9 48.7 60
Husband’s occupation ∗∗∗
 Not working 14.5 118 16.3 10 0.0 1
 Agricultural 26.1 2583 50.1 81 30.9 92
 Nonagricultural 17.0 3212 37.3 119 19.0 123
 Manual labour 26.6 4567 49.8 163 27.2 307
Spousal age difference ∗∗∗
 Less than 5 years 24.1 4393 48.2 150 31.7 183
 5 to 9 years 22.6 4369 44.7 166 22.0 238
 10 and above 25.2 1722 39.8 57 26.2 102
Place of residence ∗∗∗
 Urban 20.3 4141 45.1 131 27.8 280
 Rural 24.8 6373 45.8 242 24.5 243
Household structure ∗∗∗ ∗∗
 Nuclear 29.8 4551 48.8 138 32.0 309
 Nonnuclear 20.2 5257 43.8 181 20.6 193
Household wealth ∗∗∗ ∗∗
 Poor (40) 30.7 3612 51.4 203 38.6 102
 Middle (20) 21.7 4904 41.4 124 26.9 336
 Rich (40) 10.6 1998 25.4 46 4.2 85
Religion ∗∗∗
 Hindu 23.1 7859 45.8 300 26.8 465
 Muslim 26.7 1508 45.3 72 20.5 26
 Others 22.6 1147 1 19.9 32
Caste/tribe ∗∗∗ ∗∗∗ ∗∗
 SC/ST 27.7 3493 67.4 56 33.7 163
 Others 22.0 7021 41.7 317 22.8 360
Total 23.6 10514 45.7 373 26.1 523
  • % is based on weighted sample and N is unweighted sample, Chi-Square value:  p < 0.05;  ∗∗p < 0.01;  ∗∗∗p < 0.001.

The respondents who witnessed their father beating mother, who justified the behavior of their partner on beating them, and whose husband consumed alcohol were particularly vulnerable to physical violence. A significant and consistent relationship with physical violence across India and the selected two states was observed with these three characteristics. More than 60 percent of women in Bihar and about 30 to 40 percent in Tamil Nadu experienced physical violence in the last one year preceding the survey with these three characteristics. Further, higher education of the respondent and her husband as well as better occupation status of the respondent was likely to be protective of physical violence across states and at all India level.

In a similar fashion, some of the sociodemographic factors also showed significant differences. Physical violence by household structure revealed that joint family was protective of physical violence. The result was significant at the national level and in Tamil Nadu. Physical violence among the respondents was double among poor household as compared to rich household in Bihar. Bihar and Tamil Nadu, conceptualized as culturally distinct states, illustrated that physical violence was higher among lower caste particularly among the Scheduled Caste as compared to the upper caste. Two out of three women from Scheduled Caste household in Bihar and one in three in Tamil Nadu were likely to experience physical violence.

3.1. Mean Differences in Age at Marriage by Experience of Physical Violence

Table 4 shows mean difference in age at marriage among those who experienced physical violence and those who did not. Mean age at marriage varied considerably in Bihar and Tamil Nadu and at all India level. Although mean age at marriage in Tamil Nadu was in confirmation to the norm of legal age at marriage in India, that is, age 18, the difference in age at marriage between women who experienced physical violence and those who did not was about 10 months (0.8 years). This difference is somewhat lower in Bihar (7 months or 0.62 years) between those who experienced physical violence and those who did not. However, the overall mean age at marriage in Bihar was abysmally low at 16.4 years which is much below the national average of 17.2 years. The difference in mean age at marriage between those who experienced physical violence and those who did not at the national level was slightly more than one year (1.03 years).

Table 4. Mean differences in age at marriage by experience of physical violence in the last 12 months, NFHS-3 2006-07, India.
Experience of physical violence in the last 12 months India Bihar Tamil Nadu
Mean N SD Mean N SD Mean N SD
No 17.41 8232 2.646 16.7 199 2.439 18.44 363 2.517
Yes 16.38 2282 2.374 16.08 174 1.995 17.64 160 2.556
Total 17.19 10514 2.624 16.41 373 2.261 18.2 523 2.553

3.2. Determinants of Physical Violence Experienced by Young Women

Results from logistic regression (Table 5) showed women empowerment and age at marriage as significant predictors of physical violence. After controlling for socioeconomic and demographic factors associated with physical violence, the results at India level predicted that women from low empowerment index were 1.36 times more likely at risk to experience physical violence (OR = 1.36, p < 0.001), and the women in medium empowerment index were 1.21 times more likely to experience physical violence as compared to women in high empowerment index (OR = 1.20, p < 0.001). The respondents who got married before the age of 15 were 1.38 times more likely and those who got married between the ages of 15–17 were 1.34 times more likely to experience physical violence (OR = 1.38, p < 0.001; OR = 1.34, p < 0.001), respectively, as compared to those who got married after the age of 18 at all India level. The respondents who were in the medium empowerment index were 2.38 times more likely to experience physical violence as compared to women in high women empowerment index in Tamil Nadu (OR = 2.38, p < 0.01). Age at marriage was significantly associated in case of Bihar. The finding from the logistic regression predicted that respondents who got married before the age of 15 were 3.27 times more likely to experience physical violence as compared to those who got married after the age of 18 (OR = 3.27, p < 0.001) in Bihar.

Table 5. Logistic regression model for experience of physical violence by women (20–24) during the last 12 months in India, Bihar, and Tamil Nadu, NFHS-3 2006-07.
India Bihar Tamil Nadu
OR CI at 90% OR CI at 90% OR CI at 90%
Women empowerment
 Low 1.360 ∗∗∗ 1.180–1.567 1.411 (0.766–2.598) 0.851 (0.436–1.662)
 Medium 1.216 ∗∗∗ 1.062–1.392 1.388 (0.848–2.27) 2.387 ∗∗ (1.194–4.77)
 High (reference)
Age at marriage
 Before 15 1.384 ∗∗∗ 1.198–1.599 3.279 ∗∗∗ (1.786–6.019) 1.134 (0.571–2.251)
 15–17 1.349 ∗∗∗ 1.175–1.549 1.101 (0.649–1.869) 1.078 (0.55–2.111)
 After 18 (reference) R2 = 0.182 R2 = 0.362 R2 = 0.316
  • Significant at 90 percent;  ∗∗∗p < 0.001,  ∗∗p < 0.01.
  • Model is controlled for all the background characteristics considered in the bivariate table.

4. Discussion

The findings from the study underscored risk of physical violence to be associated with child marriage and relatively low level of women empowerment. The results from the logistic regression analysis suggested that lower levels of women empowerment were associated with physical violence in Tamil Nadu and child marriage in Bihar. Low level of education, economic status, and rural centric disadvantage were observed in Bihar compared to Tamil Nadu curtailing women from Bihar from losing their bargaining power in the marital relation. The state of powerlessness of women, particularly among the child brides in North India, was acknowledged in various other studies [14, 16] leading to vulnerable condition for violence against women in Bihar. On the other hand, the culture of marrying a known person from a relation may have been protective of violence in case of Tamil Nadu. It may be further observed that bivariate analysis indicated joint family to be protective of physical violence in Tamil Nadu but not so in case of Bihar. Joint family and cross-cousin marriage may work as combined deterrent factor for physical violence in the culturally distinct state of Tamil Nadu unlike Bihar. Although the majority of the women in Tamil Nadu compared with Bihar were better off in terms of education, work status, wealth index, and so forth, lower levels of women empowerment were a significant predictor of violence against women in Tamil Nadu and not so in case of Bihar.

The role of intergenerational violence or the respondent witnessing father beating mother had a distinct effect in these two culturally different states. Comparatively, the majority of the women in Tamil Nadu compared with Bihar witnessed their father beating mother but intergenerational violence showed little effect on experience of physical violence amongst the women from Tamil Nadu. On the other hand, the majority of women from Bihar who witnessed their father beating mother reported physical violence. The women who justified wife beating if she went out without telling husband, neglected the house or children, argued with husband, refused to have sex with husband, did not cook food properly, was suspected by her husband of being unfaithful; or showed disrespect for the in-laws were considered to have alleviated risk of experiencing physical violence [16, 2729]; however, a comparatively less percentage of women who justified wife beating in Tamil Nadu than Bihar reported physical violence.

One of the reasons for the relatively low level of violence among those women who justify wife beating behavior in Tamil Nadu may be due to underreporting of violence or accepting violence as part of one’s life. It may be understood that the women who justified wife beating were those with low level of women empowerment. More studies are required to understand the relationship between justifying wife beating as well as witnessing father beating mother and physical violence in different cultural context. The culturally different states are likely to demonstrate different risk factors as evident in this study.

Mean age at marriage between the respondents who experienced violence during the last one year and those who did not had a considerable gap. The differences in mean age at marriage were higher in Tamil Nadu as compared to Bihar. The mean age at marriage was low among those who reported physical violence as compared to those who did not report physical violence. Child marriage is highly prevalent in Bihar and therefore age at marriage by experiences of physical violence did not vary much unlike in case of Tamil Nadu. It was observed that physical violence was higher among Scheduled Caste and poor women across Bihar and Tamil Nadu. It may be indicative that regardless of distinct culture, women from poor socioeconomic strata are vulnerable to physical violence.

The current study adds on to prior research conducted on factors associated with physical violence. The findings confirm the existing literature that investigated the role of child marriage in physical violence [5, 710] and demonstrated that child marriage increases the risk of physical violence specifically in different sociocultural settings as in the case of Bihar. On the contrary, this study also confirms previous studies that have found a negative association between the level of women empowerment and physical violence [5, 17, 18]. Yet, this cannot be generalized as different cultural contexts although it restricts women’s movement and autonomy but protects them from physical violence. Many of the earlier studies did not examine the role of age at marriage as well as women empowerment together with physical violence of a recent age cohort of women. The need to study physical violence against women in a distinct cultural setting such as Tamil Nadu, irrespective of its socioeconomic development [19], is addressed in this paper. The study highlights that women from culturally different states can respond in a different fashion to physical violence. In order to better understand the relation between whether, how, and why in culturally distinct contexts age at marriage and women empowerment with physical violence are related, future qualitative investigation is needed.

While results from the current study provide important insights into child marriage and relatively low level of women empowerment to be associated with physical violence, the results must be interpreted in light of a few limitations. The outcome of physical violence is based on self-report. Underreporting of incidence is possible due to social desirability and recall biases. The study does not suggest any directional linkages between child marriage and physical violence or women empowerment and physical violence because of the fact that the analysis is carried out from cross-sectional data. Thus, one cannot be certain as to whether early marriage causes physical violence or whether lower levels of women empowerment cause physical violence or whether any other factor perpetrates violence. Child marriage may be a precursor to the experience of physical violence as in the case of India where premarital sex is largely absent and therefore physical violence may have taken place after marriage [16]. Small sample size particularly in the case of Bihar has affected the estimates although appropriate sampling weights were used. Finally, this study is specific to women in the age group of 20–24 and therefore cannot be generalized for all women.

5. Conclusion

The study examined the relationship between age at marriage and level of women empowerment with the risk of experiencing physical violence in two culturally distinct states, namely, Bihar and Tamil Nadu. Child marriage and women empowerment are related to physical violence but the relationship is context specific. There may be a host of other factors that are related to physical violence but we limited our investigation to child marriage and women empowerment with other possible covariates. This study reiterates that physical violence is deeply entrenched in both culturally distinct states with a varied proportion. However, the pattern and correlates of physical violence are different in these two states which may be due to distinct culture and stages of socioeconomic progress in Tamil Nadu and Bihar.

Curbing violence needs a culture specific intervention. Addressing an issue such as violence that has remained a private domain and has been secretly dealt with in India needs involvement of men and women alike. Family as a primary unit need to be targeted to educate them on the ill effects of violence in the life of a woman and her offspring. The structures of the family in these two states are very different. An in-depth qualitative study exploring the cultural influence on violence against women may provide a road map for the intervention.

Combating violence and eradicating child marriage are very necessary to ensure human rights protection for the women. Provision for better education may help delay the age at marriage and empower women. At the same time, the government needs to urgently establish crisis center to provide treatment and recognize violence against women as a public health problem as it has negative consequences on women’s health and wellbeing [5, 79]. The future generations pulled out of school early with no skills to access employment opportunity become part of the vicious cycle of poverty. Child marriage is a problem not only to the bride but to her children, society, and nation as a whole.

Conflict of Interests

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.

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