WorthlessSlavicShit
There are no happy endings in Eastern Europe.
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Title.
Prevalence and Determinants of Female-Perpetrated Intimate Partner Violence against Heterosexual Men Living with HIV in a Semi Rural Community, Northern Nigeria.
Intimate partner violence among male and female Russian university students
Men's Self-Reported Experiences of Women's Controlling Behaviours and Intimate Partner Violence in Kenya
Understanding sibling violence and its impact over the life course: The case of Ghana
In modern times, 33.5% of married men in Kenya have been victims of physical domestic violence (Kigaya, 2021) According to Gathogo (2015), in the Central region of Kenya alone, by 2012 there had been 300,000 cases of domestic violence against men.
In most Arab countries (Yemen, Libya, Tunisia, Palestine, Iraq, Jordan, Sudan, and Algeria) men were more likely to be victims of domestic violence than women (Bouhlila, 2019)
Men also go through sexual violence. 24.6% of married men in Kenya have been victims of sexual domestic violence (being forced to have sex with, or being raped by their wives) (Kigaya, 2021)
According to Wanambisi (2015), men are more likely to be victims of gender based violence in Kenya, with 48.6 percent of men surveyed being victims of gender based violence, compared to 37.7 percent of women.
r/MensRights - Abuse of men and boys (with references)
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The prevalence of IPV in the last year was 45% (145D 322). Out of the survivors of IPV, 143 (98.6%), 75 (51.7%), and 51 (35.2%) had experienced psychological aggression, physical assault and sexual coercion respectively.
Prevalence and Determinants of Female-Perpetrated Intimate Partner Violence against Heterosexual Men Living with HIV in a Semi Rural Community, Northern Nigeria.
Table 3 shows that there was no statistical difference between gender with regard to victimization, with 23.1% of females reporting having been victimized by their intimate partners, compared with 28.6% of males. This finding was true for all levels of physical assault.
At the same time, nearly equal numbers of males and females reported perpetrating sexual coercion against a partner (24.4% of males vs. 22.9% of females); this rate was not statistically different for any of the different levels of coercion.
Intimate partner violence among male and female Russian university students
Over 60% of the Kenyan men surveyed reported their female partners were controlling. Compared with those who did not, men who reported controlling behaviours were significantly more likely to have experienced three types of violence (physical, sexual and emotional). Educated Kenyan men had higher odds of experiencing physical and emotional violence than the uneducated, and they reported higher levels of control by their female partners.
Men's Self-Reported Experiences of Women's Controlling Behaviours and Intimate Partner Violence in Kenya
Logit models were used to explore retrospective accounts of women’s experience of various types of sibling violence in childhood and their later victimization and/or perpetration of IPV. Results showed sibling violence was prevalent in our sample: 58.1% experienced sibling emotional violence, 32% experienced physical violence, and 27.9% experienced sexual violence. Our findings generally supported the life course perspective. Women with experiences of sibling physical, sexual, and emotional violence were significantly more likely to perpetrate physical, sexual, and emotional IPV in adulthood. Similarly, women with experiences of sibling violence were more likely to report IPV victimization in later years.
Understanding sibling violence and its impact over the life course: The case of Ghana